Publications by authors named "Laundon C"

Purpose: To evaluate the assumptions on which the American College of Medical Genetics (ACMG) Standards and Guidelines for detecting mosaicism in amniotic fluid cultures are based.

Methods: Data from 653 cases of amniotic fluid mosaicism were collected from 26 laboratories. A chi-square goodness-of-fit test was used to compare the observed number of mosaic cases with the expected number based on binomial distribution theory.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Duplications and deletions of the same gene loci or chromosome regions are known to produce different clinical manifestations and are significant factors in human morbidity and mortality. Extensive cytogenetic and molecular cytogenetic studies with cosmid and YAC probes in two patients with unique mosaicism for reciprocal duplication-deletion allowed us to further understand the origin of these abnormalities. The first patient's mosaic karyotype was 46,XX, inv dup(11) (q23q13)/46,XX,del(11)(q13q23).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A de novo mosaic extra structurally abnormal chromosome (ESAC) was detected in 33 per cent of cultured amniotic fluid cells from a pregnant woman. Neither Q-banding nor fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) employing a DNA probe for nucleolar organizer region demonstrated the presence of satellites on the ESAC. Spectral karyotyping (SKY) was performed in this prenatal case and led to a quick and accurate determination of the ESAC as chromosome 14 in origin.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The heteromorphic nature of the short-arms of human acrocentric chromosomes is considered the norm without any dire consequences. We characterized two highly unusual chromosome 22 variants with extremely enlarged short arms by routine and molecular cytogenetic techniques. Routine banding revealed that the two variants were not alike.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Fourteen cases of Turner syndrome (45,X), two cases of mosaic Turner syndrome (45,X/47,XXX and 45,X/ 46,XX), and one case of Turner syndrome involving an isochromosome X [46,X,i(X)(q10)] were ascertained by prenatal maternal serum alpha-fetoprotein (MSAFP) and free beta human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) screening or by ultrasound. Patient-specific risks for Down syndrome were calculated and used as the criteria to determine offering further testing. Eleven of the 17 cases had hydrops and presented with an increased Down syndrome risk based on MSAFP and free beta hCG screening.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The study of immortalization and other alterations associated with neoplastic transformation of endometrial stromal cells is important to understanding the development of uterine sarcomas and mixed tumors. Because stromal cells are important regulators of associated epithelial cells, alterations in the regulation of stromal cell proliferation that influence epithelial cells may also contribute to the development of endometrial carcinomas. To study immortalization and associated phenotypic and genetic alterations of human endometrial stromal cells, cultures were transfected with a plasmid containing an ori-, temperature-sensitive mutant SV40, A209 (tsSV40).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

To show that DNA containing sharp sequence-directed curvature can preferentially establish ends of supertwisted domains, a highly curved DNA from Crithidia fasciculata was cloned into two sites separated by 28% in pBR325. When this construct (pJGC2) was examined by electron microscopy, 63% of the supercoiled molecules were branched with three or more arms, and the remaining molecules appeared as linear interwound rods. The distance between the tips of two of the arms for the branched molecules measured within 2% of 28% of the DNA contour for 32% of the pJGC2 molecules, as contrasted with only 6.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A DNA segment of approximately 200 base pairs (bp) from Crithidia fasciculata kinetoplast minicircles was previously shown by electron microscopy (EM) to bend into a small circle due to its unique nucleotide sequence containing repeated blocks of 4-6 A's. When this segment was flanked by 207 bp of plasmid DNA on one side and 460 bp on the other, the resulting 890-bp DNA was found to appear either relatively straight or extremely bent as visualized by EM. The bend was located one-third the distance from one end.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We showed previously that sodium butyrate stimulated human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) measured by radioimmunoassay of medium from human second trimester amniotic fluid cell cultures, termed AF cells. We now find that stimulation of hCG in the presence of sodium butyrate takes as long as 20 h. When AF cells are preincubated with sodium butyrate, hCG levels increase in direct relation to length of the preincubation period.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The media from primary cultures and subcultures of second trimester human amniotic fluid (AF) cells were assayed by radioimmunoassay to quantitate production of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG). Primary AF cultures produce more hCG per cell than do the corresponding subcultures. Sodium butyrate (2mM) stimulates AF subcultures to produce 5-13 times more hCG per cell or per mg of cellular protein than do untreated subcultures.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The major class of cells subcultured from human amniotic fluid retains properties of trophoblast. The objective of this study was to determine whether the multinucleate cells appearing in these cultures form by fusion, as is true for syncytiotrophoblast. Culture methodology involved subdivision of one flask into two, one of which was labeled with 3H-thymidine and the other with 14C-thymidine.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF