Martin R H, McGillivray B, Barclay L, Hildebrand K, Ko E
Department of Paediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Hum Reprod. 1990 Jul;5(5):606-9. doi: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.humrep.a137153.
Sperm chromosome complements were studied in a man who carried a reciprocal translocation t(12;20)(q24.3;q11). A total of 113 spermatozoa were karyotyped after in-vitro penetration of hamster eggs. 2:2 and 3:1 meiotic segregations were observed with the following frequencies: alternate 47%, adjacent 1 42%, adjacent 2 10%, 3:1 2%. For alternate segregations, the number of normal spermatozoa (25) was not significantly different from the number of spermatozoa carrying a balanced form of the translocation (28), as theoretically expected. The proportion of spermatozoa with an unbalanced form of the translocation was 53%. There was no evidence for an interchromosomal effect since the frequencies of numerical and structural abnormalities (unrelated to the translocation) were within the normal range of control donors.