6533b835fe1ef96bd129feea

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Single-Nucleotide Polymorphism Array-Based Characterization of Ring Chromosome 18

Roberta Santos GuilhermeMaria Isabel MelaragnoJohannes ZschockeEdda HaberlandtAndrew W. GreenChong Ae KimMartin ErdelMartin ErdelGerd UtermannBarbara UtermannLeslie Domenici KulikowskiChristine FauthClaudio CastellanOlaf RittingerAna SpreizDieter KotzotVera Ayres MeloniBrigitte Wellek

subject

AdultMaleAdolescentRing chromosomeSingle-nucleotide polymorphismBiologyPolymorphism Single NucleotideCROMOSSOMOS HUMANOS (ANORMALIDADES;COMPLICAÇÕES)Young AdultMeiosisPolymorphism (computer science)SNPBody SizeHumansRing ChromosomesChildGenetic Association StudiesOligonucleotide Array Sequence AnalysisGeneticsBreakpointInfant NewbornInfantKaryotypeMiddle AgedPhenotypeChild PreschoolKaryotypingPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthFemaleChromosome DeletionChromosomes Human Pair 18HeadMaternal AgeMicrosatellite Repeats

description

Objective To study genotype–phenotype correlation of ring chromosome 18 [r(18)] in 9 patients with 46,XN karyotype. Study design In 9 patients with a de novo 46,XN,r(18) karyotype (7 females, 2 males), we performed high-resolution single-nucleotide polymorphism array analysis (Illumina Human Omni1-QuadV1 array in 6 patients, Affymetrix 6.0 array in 3 patients), investigation of parental origin, and genotype–phenotype correlation. Results No breakpoint was recurrent. Single metaphases with loss of the ring, double rings, or secondarily rearranged rings were found in some cases, but true mosaicism was present in none of these cases. In 3 patients, additional duplications in 18p (of 1.4 Mb, 2 Mb, and 5.8 Mb) were detected. In 1 patient, an additional deletion of 472 kb in Xp22.33, including the SHOX gene, was found. Parental origin of r(18) was maternal in 2 patients and paternal in 4 patients, and formation was most likely meiotic. Karyotype was normal in all investigated parents (n = 15). At birth, mean maternal age was 30 years (n = 9) and mean paternal age was 34.4 years (n = 9). Conclusion Genotype–phenotype correlation revealed extensive clinical variability but no characteristic r(18) phenotype. Severity of clinical signs were generally correlated with the size of the deletion. Patients with large deletions in 18p and small deletions in 18q exhibited mainly symptoms related to 18p-, whereas those with large deletions in 18q and small deletions in 18p had symptoms of 18q-.

10.1016/j.jpeds.2013.06.005