Abstract
The prophase of meiosis I ensures the correct segregation of chromosomes to each daughter cell. This includes the pairing, synapsis, and recombination of homologous chromosomes. A subset of chromosomal abnormalities, including translocation and inversion, disturbs these processes, resulting in the failure to complete synapsis. This activates the meiotic pachytene checkpoint, and the gametes are fated to undergo cell cycle arrest and subsequent apoptosis. Spermatogenic cells appear to be more vulnerable to the pachytene checkpoint, and male carriers of chromosomal abnormalities are more susceptible to infertility. In contrast, oocytes tend to bypass the checkpoint and instead generate other problems, such as chromosome imbalance that often leads to recurrent pregnancy loss in female carriers. Recent advances in genetic manipulation technologies have increased our knowledge about the pachytene checkpoint and surveillance systems that detect chromosomal synapsis. This review focuses on the consequences of synapsis failure in humans and provides an overview of the mechanisms involved. We also discuss the sexual dimorphism of the involved pathways that leads to the differences in reproductive outcomes between males and females.
Highlights
Down syndrome is the most common chromosomal abnormality that manifests in newborns
About three-quarters of Down syndrome cases with Robertsonian translocation occur de novo, while the remaining one-quarter are familial cases in which either parent is a balanced carrier of the same translocation
We focus on chromosomal translocation and male-only sterility
Summary
Down syndrome is the most common chromosomal abnormality that manifests in newborns. The karyotype of 90% of Down syndrome cases is standard trisomy 21, whereas in approximately 4% of cases an extra chromosome 21 is associated with the Robertsonian translocation of chromosome 21 (Gardner and Sutherland, 2004). Because synapsis failure can induce meiotic recombination defects, partial synapsis failure due to translocation might instigate enough recombination efficiency to activate the DSB-dependent checkpoint, leading to cell death during the pachytene as well.
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