| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2059439 | Morphologie | 2009 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
In 1956, the number of chromosomes in humans is set at 46; in 1959, the link between a disability (mongolism) and a chromosomal anomaly (the Down syndrome) is established: human and medical cytogenetics were born. Since then, progress has been remarkable: the techniques of chromosomal and molecular cytogenetics can reach a resolution of the size of a single gene with a pangenomic scope. Practical applications are constantly expanded. The clinical impact is significant, from the genetic counselling in constitutional to the targeted therapies. Fifty years later, cytogenetics can be defined as the science which aims to detect chromosomal abnormalities, whether constitutional or acquired, using chromosomal or molecular techniques aiming to study the arrangement of genes in chromosomes, to quantify the number of gene copy and to look for the presence of gene fusion.
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Authors
P. Vago, l'équipe de cytogénétique médicale de Clermont-Ferrand l'équipe de cytogénétique médicale de Clermont-Ferrand,
