39. Turner syndrome results from (1) Monosomy of sex-chromosome. (2) monosomy of autosome. (3) nullisomy of sex-chromosome. (4) trisomy Of autosome.

39. Turner syndrome results from
(1) Monosomy of sex-chromosome.
(2) monosomy of autosome.
(3) nullisomy of sex-chromosome.
(4) trisomy Of autosome.

Explanation:

  • Turner syndrome is typically associated with karyotype 45,X, meaning 44 autosomes plus only one X chromosome. This is a classic example of aneuploidy due to monosomy of a sex chromosome.

Option-wise explanation:

  1. Monosomy of sex-chromosome – correct

  • Turner syndrome = monosomy X (45,X). One X chromosome is missing or partially missing in all or some cells, leading to characteristic features like short stature, gonadal dysgenesis, and primary amenorrhea.

  1. Monosomy of autosome – incorrect

  • Monosomy for a full autosome (2n−1 for an autosome) is usually lethal in humans and is not Turner syndrome. Turner specifically involves the sex chromosome, not an autosome.

  1. Nullisomy of sex-chromosome – incorrect

  • Nullisomy would mean both sex chromosomes are missing (0 sex chromosomes), which is not viable in humans. Turner patients have one X, not zero.

  1. Trisomy of autosome – incorrect

  • Trisomies of autosomes (e.g., trisomy 21 = Down syndrome, trisomy 18, trisomy 13) involve an extra autosome, not the loss of a sex chromosome, and produce different syndromes, not Turner.

Thus, Turner syndrome specifically results from monosomy of a sex chromosome (usually X), so option (1) is correct.

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