6533b7d3fe1ef96bd1261487

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Screening of subtelomeric rearrangements in autistic disorder: identification of a partial trisomy of 13q34 in a patient bearing a 13q;21p translocation.

Valentino RomanoDonatella GrecoMarinella ZingaleMaria Antonietta Di BellaRegina ReganAlessia GalloRosalba D'annaFrancesco CalìGiovanna GambinoAngela RagusaMario G. MirisolaMaria Carmela CarboneAlda RagalmutoOrnella GalesiMaurizio EliaGregorio Seidita

subject

AdultMaleDerivative chromosomeAdolescentGene DosageautismChromosomal translocationTrisomyBiologyGene dosagePolymerase Chain ReactionTranslocation GeneticCellular and Molecular NeurosciencemedicineHumansAutistic DisorderChildGenetics (clinical)In Situ Hybridization FluorescenceChromosome 13GeneticsChromosomes Human Pair 13ChromosomeTelomereSubtelomeremedicine.diseasePsychiatry and Mental healthfrontal bossingFemaleTrisomyChromosome 21

description

Within the framework of a FISH screening protocol to detect cryptic subtelomeric rearrangements in autistic disorder (AD), a patient bearing three copies of the subtelomeric portion of the q arm of chromosome 13 has been identified. Beside AD, the patient also has severe mental retardation and displays several dysmorphic features. Further FISH analyses revealed that the trisomy was caused by the translocation of a 13q subtelomeric fragment to the acrocentric tip of one chromosome 21 [46,XY.ish der(21) t(13;21) (q34;p13)(D13S1825+)]. Gene dosage experiments carried out with three multiallelic polymorphisms of the subtelomeric region of chromosome 13q showed that the putative length of the triplicate region does not exceed 300 kb about, that is, the distance from telomere to the first normally inherited marker. In addition, gene dosage analysis performed on the derivative chromosome 21, did not reveal loss of the most telomeric protein-encoding genes on 21p. The potential relationship between a postulated increased expression of genes on 13q34 and the complex phenotype in this trisomic patient is discussed.

10.1002/ajmg.b.30328https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16823807