Abstract
Down syndrome is a common disorder affecting many tissues both during development and later on in adult life; the principle feature of all cases is a specific form of mental retardation, which is combined with a range of variable traits. Down syndrome is an aneuploidy syndrome that is caused by trisomy for human chromosome 21. While the phenotype is most likely due to a subtle increase in gene dosage of only a small minority of the estimated 500-800 genes that are present on this chromosome, the molecular genetics of Down syndrome remains speculative. However, recent advances on a number of fronts, including chromosome studies, gene identification and mouse modelling, are giving us the tools to dissect this multifactorial gene dosage disorder.
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CITATION STYLE
Hernandez, D., & Fisher, E. M. C. (1996). Down syndrome genetics: Unravelling a multifactorial disorder. Human Molecular Genetics. Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/5.supplement_1.1411
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