Most
cells in the human body have 23 pairs of
chromosomes, or a total of 46 chromosomes. (The sperm and egg, or
gametes, each have 23 unpaired chromosomes, and
red blood cells in
bone marrow have a nucleus at first but those red blood cells that are active in blood lose their nucleus and thus they end up having no nucleus and therefore no chromosomes.) One copy of each pair is inherited from the mother and the other copy is inherited from the father. The first 22 pairs of chromosomes (called
autosomes) are numbered from 1 to 22, from largest to smallest. The 23rd pair of chromosomes are the
sex chromosomes. Typical females have two
X chromosomes, while typical males have one
X chromosome and one
Y chromosome. The characteristics of the chromosomes in a cell as they are seen under a light microscope are called the
karyotype. from a normal male human During
meiosis, when germ cells divide to create sperm and egg (gametes), each half should have the same number of chromosomes. But sometimes, the whole pair of chromosomes will end up in one gamete, and the other gamete will not get that chromosome at all. Most embryos cannot survive with a missing or extra
autosome (numbered chromosome) and are miscarried. The most frequent aneuploidy in humans is
trisomy 16 and fetuses affected with the full version of this chromosome abnormality do not survive to term, although it is possible for surviving individuals to have the
mosaic form, where trisomy 16 exists in some cells but not all. The most common aneuploidy that infants can survive with is trisomy 21, which is found in
Down syndrome, affecting 1 in 800 births.
Trisomy 18 (Edwards syndrome) affects 1 in 6,000 births, and
trisomy 13 (Patau syndrome) affects 1 in 10,000 births. 10% of infants with trisomy 18 or 13 reach 1 year of age. Changes in chromosome number may not necessarily be present in all cells in an individual. When aneuploidy is detected in a fraction of cells in an individual, it is called chromosomal
mosaicism. In general, individuals who are mosaic for a chromosomal aneuploidy tend to have a less severe form of the syndrome compared to those with full
trisomy. For many of the
autosomal trisomies, only mosaic cases survive to term. However, mitotic aneuploidy may be more common than previously recognized in somatic tissues, and aneuploidy is a characteristic of many types of
tumorigenesis. ==Mechanisms==