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1.
Uniparental disomy (UPD) of single chromosomes is a well-known molecular aberration in a group of congenital diseases commonly known as imprinting disorders (IDs). Whereas maternal and/or paternal UPD of chromosomes 6, 7, 11, 14 and 15 are associated with specific IDs (Transient neonatal diabetes mellitus, Silver–Russell syndrome, Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome (BWS), upd(14)-syndromes, Prader–Willi syndrome, Angelman Syndrome), the other autosomes are not. UPD of the whole genome is not consistent with life, in case of non-mosaic genome-wide paternal UPD (patUPD) it leads to hydatidiform mole. In contrast, mosaic genome-wide patUPD might be compatible with life. Here we present a 19-year-old woman with BWS features and initially diagnosed to be carrier of a mosaic patUPD of chromosome 11p15. However, the patient presented further clinical findings not typically associated with BWS, including nesidioblastosis, fibroadenoma, hamartoma of the liver, hypoglycaemia and ovarian steroid cell tumour. Additional molecular investigations revealed a mosaic genome-wide patUPD. So far, only nine cases with mosaic genome-wide patUPD and similar clinical findings have been reported, but these patients were nearly almost diagnosed in early childhood. Summarising the data from the literature and those from our patient, it can be concluded that the mosaic genome-wide patUPD (also known as androgenic/biparental mosaicism) might explain unusual BWS phenotypes. Thus, these findings emphasise the need for multilocus testing in IDs to efficiently detect cases with disturbances affecting more than one chromosome.  相似文献   

2.
To date, uniparental disomy (UPD) with phenotypic relevance is described for different chromosomes and it is likely that additional as yet unidentified UPD phenotypes exist. Due to technical difficulties and limitations of time and resources, molecular analyses for UPD using microsatellite markers are only performed in cases with specific phenotypic features. In this study, we carried out a whole genome UPD screening based on a microarray genotyping technique. Six patients with the diagnosis of both complete or segmental UPD including Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS; matUPD15), Angelman syndrome (AS; patUPD15), Silver-Russell syndrome (SRS; matUPD7), Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS; patUPD11p), pseudohypoparathyroidism (PHP; patUPD20q) and a rare chromosomal rearrangement (patUPD2p, matUPD2q), were genotyped using the GeneChip Human Mapping 10K Array. Our results demonstrate the presence of UPD in the patients with high efficiency and reveal clues about the mechanisms of UPD formation. We thus conclude that array based SNP genotyping is a fast, cost-effective, and reliable approach for whole genome UPD screening.  相似文献   

3.
We report on a girl with a dicentric chromosome 14 [45,XX,inv(9)(p11q13),dic(14;14)(p11.1;p11.1)] with paternal uniparental disomy (UPD) for chromosome 14. Clinical findings include severe hypotonia, thoracic dystrophy, diastasis recti, swallowing difficulties with aspiration, developmental delay, and multiple minor anomalies. UPD for chromosome 14 has been documented with paternal UPD much less commonly than with maternal UPD. There have been ten cases of paternal UPD for chromosome 14 and one case of segmental paternal isodisomy of chromosome 14. Many of the findings are nonspecific, but the radiographic rib findings (referred to as the "coat-hanger" sign) are characteristic for this condition. UPD 14 studies should be performed in children thought to have Jeune asphyxiating thoracic dystrophy or other related osteochondrodysplasias when the diagnosis is in question. Our patient and the previously reported cases support a discrete recognizable phenotype for paternal UPD for chromosome 14.  相似文献   

4.
Over the past few years, regions of genomic imprinting have been identified on a small number of chromosomes through a search for the etiology of various disorders. Distinct phenotypes have been associated with both maternal and paternal uniparental disomy (UPD) for chromosome 14. This observation indicates that there are imprinted genes present on chromosome 14, although none have been identified to date. In order to focus the search for imprinted genes on chromosome 14, we analyzed cases of maternal and paternal UPD 14 and compared them with cases of chromosome 14 deletions. Cases of paternal UPD were compared with maternal deletions and maternal UPD compared with paternal deletions. The paternal UPD anomalies seen in maternal deletion cases allowed us to associate the following features and chromosomal regions: Hirsute forehead: del(14)(q12q13. 3) and del(14)(q32); blepharophimosis: del(14)(q32); small thorax: del(14)(q11.2q13); and joint contractures: del(14)(q11.2q13) and del(14)(q31). Comparison of maternal UPD and paternal deletion cases revealed fleshy nasal tip to be most often associated with del(14)(q32), scoliosis with del(14) (q23q24.2), and del(14)(q32. 11qter) and small size at birth to be associated with del(14)(q11q13) and del(14)(q32). Our study, in conjunction with a prior study of UPD 14 and partial trisomy 14 cases, and what is known of imprinting in regions of mouse chromosomes homologous to human chromosome 14, leads us to conclude that 14q23-q32 is likely an area where imprinted genes may reside.  相似文献   

5.
Chromosome 14 demonstrates imprinting with differing phenotypes for both maternal and paternal uniparental disomy (UPD). Although only 11 cases of paternal uniparental disomy 14 (patUPD14) have been reported, a distinct clinically recognizable syndrome has emerged. The major features are polyhydramnios, small thorax, mildly short limbs, abdominal wall defects, and characteristic face with short palpebral fissures, broad flat nasal bridge, prominent philtrum, and small ears. Radiographically, the chest is bell-shaped and the ribs are distinctive with caudal bowing anteriorly and cranial bowing posteriorly. Several affected infants have died from respiratory failure. The survivors have short stature and mental retardation. The initial cases were all recognized because of translocations involving chromosome 14. Subsequently, several patients with a similar phenotype and normal chromosomes have been reported, including two with mixed iso- and hetero-disomy as well as one with segmental UPD14. Our patient is the first with pure paternal isodisomy 14 in the absence of a translocation. We present additional clinical information, review the literature, and discuss mechanisms that may explain paternal isodisomy 14 in our chromosomally normal patient. Paternal UPD14 with normal karyotype may be more common than previously suspected and may be overlooked unless recognition of the clinical phenotype prompts investigation for UPD.  相似文献   

6.
We present a boy and two girls with paternal uniparental disomy of chromosome 14q (patUPD14). One girl had a Robertsonian translocation, whereas two a normal karyotype. Based on the manifestations of these patients and four previously reported patients who all had translocated chromosome 14, The patUPD14 was thought to constitute a distinctive syndrome. The hallmarks included abdominal muscular defects, skeletal anomalies, and characteristic facies. The phenotype of patUPD14 was consistent with that of a previously reported mouse model, i.e., mouse embryos with paternal uniparental disomy of chromosome 12 that has a region orthologous to that of human chromosome 14. Dose effects of newly recognized imprinted genes on human chromosome 14q32, DLK1 and GTL2, could play an important role in the pathogenic mechanism of the distinctive malformation complex.  相似文献   

7.
Recently, mosaicism for genome-wide paternal uniparental disomy (patUPD), attributed to androgenetic/biparental mosaicism, has been shown to underlie placental mesenchymal dysplasia (PMD), a distinctive cystic placental phenotype. Manifestations of Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) have been observed in approximately one-third of fetuses or liveborn infants from pregnancies complicated by PMD. There are very few reports describing liveborn individuals with proven mosaicism for genome-wide patUPD in somatic tissues. We report two further children with complex phenotypes including some findings of BWS, congenital hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia, prolonged feeding difficulty and failure to thrive in infancy. The first developed short stature, bilateral pheochromocytomas and progressive arterial stenoses, and the second had congenital adrenal cysts, and later developed hepatoblastoma and patchy hyperpigmentation. Leukocyte DNA methylation studies of KCNQ1OT1/LIT1 and H19 loci (11p15.5) showed almost complete loss of maternal methylation (LOM) in patient 1 and partial LOM in patient 2. Microsatellite marker panels showed whole chromosome 11 patUPD. SNP array studies in both were consistent with mosaic genome-wide patUPD in leukocytes, while fibroblast DNA in Patient 1 showed biparental inheritance. This report further illustrates the clinical consequences of mosaicism for genome-wide patUPD, which results in complex and variable phenotypes. Studies for genome-wide UPD should be considered in individuals with atypical UPD phenotypes.  相似文献   

8.
Uniparental disomy (UPD) of a number of different chromosomes has been found in association with abnormal phenotypes. A growing body of evidence for an imprinting effect involving chromosome 14 has been accumulating. We report on a case of paternal UPD of chromosome 14 studied in late gestation due to polyhydramnios and a ventral wall hernia. A prenatal karyotype documented a balanced Robertsonian 14:14 translocation. The baby was born prematurely with hairy forehead, retrognathia, mild puckering of the lips and finger contractures. Hypotonia has persisted since birth and at age one year, a tracheostomy for laryngomalacia and gastrostomy for feeding remain necessary. Absence of maternal VNTR polymorphisms and homozygosity of paternal polymorphisms using chromosome 14 specific probes at D14S22 and D14S13 loci indicated paternal uniparental isodisomy (pUPID). Parental chromosomes were normal. We also report on a case of maternal UPD in a normal patient with a balanced Robertsonian 14:14 translocation and a history of multiple miscarriages. Five previous reports of chromosome 14 UPD suggest that an adverse developmental effect may be more severe whenever the UPD is paternal in origin. This is the second reported patient with paternal UPD and the fifth reported with maternal UPD, and only few phenotypic similarities are apparent. Examination of these chromosome 14 UPD cases of maternal and paternal origin suggests that there are syndromic imprinting effects. © 1995 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

9.
Uniparental disomy (UPD) is the abnormal inheritance of two copies of a chromosome from the same parent. Possible mechanisms for UPD include trisomy rescue, monosomy rescue, gametic complementation, and somatic recombination. Most of these mechanisms can involve rearranged chromosomes, particularly isochromosomes and Robertsonian translocations. Both maternal and paternal UPD have been reported for most of the acrocentric chromosomes. However, only UPD for chromosomes 14 and 15 show an apparent imprinting effect. Herein, we present two cases of paternal UPD 13 involving isochromosomes. Both cases were referred for UPD studies due to the formation of a de novo rea(13q13q). Case 2 was complicated by the segregation of a familial rob(13q14q) of maternal origin. Both propositi were phenotypically normal at the time of examination. Polymorphic marker analysis in Case 1 showed the distribution of alleles of markers along chromosome 13 to be complete isodisomy, consistent with an isochromosome. This rearrangement could have occurred either meiotically, without recombination, or mitotically. A likely mechanism for UPD in this case is monosomy rescue, through postzygotic formation of the isochromosome. In Case 2 the distribution of proximal alleles indicated an isochromosome, but recombination was evident. Thus, this isochromosome must have formed prior to or during meiosis I. A likely mechanism for UPD in this case is gametic complementation, since the mother carries a rob(13q14q) and is at risk of producing aneuploid gametes. However, trisomy rescue of a trisomy 13 conceptus cannot be completely excluded. Given that both cases were phenotypically normal, these data further support that paternal UPD 13 does not have an adverse phenotypic outcome and, thus, does not show an apparent imprinting effect.  相似文献   

10.
Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a complex multiple anomaly syndrome that has been shown to result from deficient expression of paternal chromosome 15(q11-q13). In most cases, it is caused either by deletion of this region in the paternally inherited chromosome 15 or by maternal uniparental disomy (UPD) of chromosome 15. In order to determine whether there are phenotypic differences between patients whose PWS is caused by these two different mechanisms, 54 affected individuals (37 with deletion, 17 with UPD) were personally examined and studied using molecular techniques. The previously recognized increased maternal age in patients with UPD and increased frequency of hypopigmentation in those with deletion were confirmed. Although the frequency and severity of most other manifestations of PWS did not differ significantly between the two groups, those with UPD were less likely to have a “typical” facial appearance. In addition, this group was less likely to show some of the minor manifestations such as skin picking, skill with jigsaw puzzles, and high pain threshold. Females and those with UPD were also older, on average. Possible mechanisms by which these differences could occur and the implications of these differences for diagnosis are described. Am. J. Med. Genet. 68:433–440, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

11.
Kotzot D 《Clinical genetics》2001,60(3):226-231
The results of molecular investigations of 21 cases with complete or segmental maternal uniparental disomy (UPD) 14 published in the literature were compared with respect to isodisomic and heterodisomic segments. The aim of the study was to find hints toward imprinted regions other than the recently defined imprinted segment 14q32. Three regions with no isodisomic molecular marker were found. The most distal of these regions located on 14q32.12 and 14q32.13 supports the hypothesis of genomic imprinting as the cause of the maternal UPD 14 phenotype by synteny to the maternally imprinted region on mouse distal chromosome 12 and correlation with the recently defined imprinting cluster on human chromosome 14q32. The other two heterodisomic areas located on 14q11.2-->14q12 and 14q21.1-->14q31.2 are hints toward one or more additional regions of genomic imprinting on human chromosome 14.  相似文献   

12.
Maternal uniparental disomy (UPD) for chromosome 14 [upd(14)mat] may cause a characteristic phenotype with growth and developmental deficiency and precocious puberty. We report the case of a Japanese infant with an isochromosome 14 [i(14q)] and intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR). The infant is one of triplets comprising a boy (the patient) and two karyotypically normal girls. We analyzed parent–child transmission modes of alleles on the i(14q) at 17 CA-repeat marker loci along the entire length of chromosome 14. Genotypes at 4 proximal and 5 distal loci on the i(14q) were consistent with maternal isodisomy, whereas those at an intervening region indicated maternal heterodisomy. Thus, the derivative chromosome 14 had arisen through a translocation between maternal homologous chromosomes 14 [t(14;14)(p10;q10)] after at least two crossing-over events at the first meiosis. This result also suggests that there must be maternally imprinted gene(s) on 14q, and that loss of the functionally active, paternally derived allele in the same locus may lead to IUGR. Alternatively, IUGR may be an autosomal recessive trait. In the latter case, the mother would be a heterozygote and the putative disease locus would be either at the most proximal or most distal region of 14q. Received: December 19, 1997 / Accepted: February 7, 1998  相似文献   

13.
Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) is a congenital overgrowth syndrome associated with a characteristic pattern of visceromegaly and predisposition to childhood tumours. BWS is a genetically heterogeneous disorder; most cases are sporadic but approximately 15% are familial and a small number of BWS patients have cytogenetic abnormalities involving chromosome 11p15. Genomic imprinting effects have been implicated in familial and non-familial BWS. We have investigated the molecular pathology of 106 sporadic BWS cases; 17% (14/83) of informative cases had uniparental disomy (UPD) for chromosome 11p15.5. In each case UPD appeared to result from a postzygotic event resulting in mosaicism for segmental paternal isodisomy. The critical region for isodisomy was refined to a 25 cM interval between D11S861 and D11S2071 which contained the IGF2, H19, and p57(KIP2) genes. In three cases isodisomy for 11q markers was detected but this did not extend further than 11q13-q21 suggesting that complete chromosome 11 disomy may not produce a BWS phenotype. The allele specific methylation status of the H19 gene was investigated in 80 sporadic BWS cases. All 13 cases with UPD tested displayed hypermethylation consistent with an excess of paternal H19 alleles. In addition, five of 63 (8%) cases with normal biparental inheritance had H19 hypermethylation consistent with an "imprinting centre" mutation (ICM) or "imprinting error" (IE) lesion. The phenotype of patients with putative ICM/IE mutations was variable and overlapped with that of non-UPD sporadic BWS cases with normal H19 methylation. However, exomphalos was significantly (p < 0.05) more common in the latter group. These findings may indicate differential effects on the expression of imprinted genes in chromosome 11p15 according to the precise molecular pathology. Analysis of H19 methylation is useful for the diagnosis of both UPD or altered imprinting in BWS and shows that a variety of molecular mechanisms may cause relaxation of IGF2 imprinting in BWS.  相似文献   

14.
We present the case of a maternal heterodisomy for chromosome 7 in the daughter of a t(7;16)(q21;q24) reciprocal translocation carrier. The proband was referred to the hospital for growth retardation and minor facial dysmorphism without mental retardation. A diagnosis of Silver‐Russell syndrome was suspected. Chromosomal analysis documented a 46,XX,t(7;16)(q21;q24)mat chromosome pattern. Microsatellite analysis showed a normal biparental inheritance of chromosome 16 but a maternal heterodisomy of chromosome 7. Occurrence of uniparental disomy (UPD) is a well‐recognized consequence of chromosomal abnormalities that increase the rate of meiotic nondisjunction, mainly Robertsonian translocations and supernumerary chromosomes. Although reciprocal translocations should, theoretically, be also at increased risk of UPD, only three cases have been reported so far. However, because the association between uniparental disomy and reciprocal translocation may exist with an underestimated frequency, prenatal diagnosis is recommended when clinically relevant chromosomes for UPD are involved. © 2002 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
We present the case of a maternal heterodisomy for chromosome 7 in the daughter of a t(7;16)(q21;q24) reciprocal translocation carrier. The proband was referred to the hospital for growth retardation and minor facial dysmorphism without mental retardation. A diagnosis of Silver-Russell syndrome was suspected. Chromosomal analysis documented a 46,XX,t(7;16)(q21;q24)mat chromosome pattern. Microsatellite analysis showed a normal biparental inheritance of chromosome 16 but a maternal heterodisomy of chromosome 7. Occurrence of uniparental disomy (UPD) is a well-recognized consequence of chromosomal abnormalities that increase the rate of meiotic nondisjunction, mainly Robertsonian translocations and supernumerary chromosomes. Although reciprocal translocations should, theoretically, be also at increased risk of UPD, only three cases have been reported so far. However, because the association between uniparental disomy and reciprocal translocation may exist with an underestimated frequency, prenatal diagnosis is recommended when clinically relevant chromosomes for UPD are involved.  相似文献   

16.
To our knowledge, 22 cases of chromosome 14 maternal uniparental disomy (UPD(14)mat) have been reported so far. The majority of cases were ascertained because of an abnormal phenotype associated with a Robertsonian translocation involving chromosome 14. We report here on a child with UPD(14)mat detected prenatally and resulting from trisomy rescue in a maternal meiosis I non-disjunction trisomic zygote. After four years of clinical follow up, in addition to intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR), only short stature and small hands and feet were observed. These clinical data as well as the ascertainment and mechanism of origin of UPD(14)mat were compared with those observed in previously reported cases. It appears that the clinical spectrum of UPD(14)mat is milder in our patient than in patients with UPD(14)mat resulting from other chromosomal mechanisms. In addition, a hypothesis based on abnormal imprinting is proposed to explain the variability of the UPD(14)mat.


Keywords: maternal UPD; chromosome 14; MCP; imprinting  相似文献   

17.
We report on an 8-year-old boy with a proximal interstitial deletion of the long arm of chromosome 6 with breakpoints q13 to q14.2. He has a characteristic facial appearance that is seen in several of the previously described cases. Details of his clinical course are reviewed and compared with the nine previous reported cases of the proximal deletion 6q syndrome. Am. J. Med. Genet. 71:353–356, 1997. © 1997 Wiley-Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

18.
Maternal uniparental disomy 14 (UPD(14)mat) and related (epi)genetic aberrations affecting the 14q32.2 imprinted region result in a clinically recognizable condition which is recently referred to as Temple Syndrome (TS). Phenotypic features in TS include pre- and post-natal growth failure, prominent forehead, and feeding difficulties that are also found in Silver–Russell Syndrome (SRS). Thus, we examined the relevance of UPD(14)mat and related (epi)genetic aberrations to the development of SRS in 85 Japanese patients who satisfied the SRS diagnostic criteria proposed by Netchine et al and had neither epimutation of the H19-DMR nor maternal uniparental disomy 7. Pyrosequencing identified hypomethylation of the DLK1-MEG3 intergenic differentially methylated region (IG-DMR) and the MEG3-DMR in two cases. In both cases, microsatellite analysis showed biparental transmission of the homologs of chromosome 14, with no evidence for somatic mosaicism with full or segmental maternal isodisomy involving the imprinted region. FISH and array comparative genomic hybridization revealed neither deletion of the two DMRs nor discernible copy number alteration in the 14q32.2 imprinted region. Methylation patterns were apparently normal in other six disease-associated DMRs. In addition, a thorough literature review revealed a considerable degree of phenotypic overlap between SRS and TS, although body asymmetry was apparently characteristic of SRS. The results indicate the occurrence of epimutation affecting the IG-DMR and the MEG3-DMR in the two cases, and imply that UPD(14)mat and related (epi)genetic aberrations constitute a rare but important underlying factor for SRS.  相似文献   

19.
The recent development of a set of chromosome‐specific, subtelomeric probes has proved useful in diagnosis and recurrence risk counseling of patients and families with mental retardation and in further characterization of known chromosomal abnormalities. Cases of cryptic, subtelomeric rearrangements may account for up to 7.5% of cases of idiopathic moderate–severe mental retardation. We present the molecular cytogenetic studies of trisomy 14q detected by subtelomeric fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Our patient is a 3‐year‐old girl with growth and developmental delay, myelomeningocele, partial agenesis of the corpus callosum, hypertelorism, tented mouth, simple ears, small mandible, and congenital heart disease (atrial and ventricular septal defects with subaortic conus). G‐banded chromosome analysis was apparently normal. A set of FISH‐based, subtelomeric, region‐specific probes revealed trisomy for 14q in the child. Parental FISH studies established that the mother is a balanced carrier for a half‐cryptic translocation between the distal long arm of chromosome 14 and the short arm of chromosome 22. FISH analysis using two BAC clones that contain the imprinted genes MEG3 and DLK1, which localize to 14q32, established that our patient has two maternal copies of these genes. Because the child does not have features of the maternal UPD 14 syndrome, this case suggests that it is absence of expression of a paternally expressed gene, rather than overexpression of a maternally expressed gene, that is responsible for the maternal UPD 14 phenotype. © 2002 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.  相似文献   

20.
Aberrant methylation at different imprinted loci has been reported for several congenital imprinting disorders, that is, Silver-Russell syndrome (SRS), but the coincidental occurrence of aberrant methylation and uniparental disomy (UPD) has not yet been described. We report on a patient initially diagnosed with SRS carrying a segmental maternal UPD of chromosome 7 [upd(7q)mat]. By further screening the patient's DNA for methylation defects on other chromosomes we identified a hypomethylation of the paternally methylated DLK1/GTL2 locus in 14q32, an epigenotype typically associated with the upd(14)mat phenotype. Detailed clinical analysis confirmed the molecular finding in the patient indicating that the 14q32 epimutation was clinically preponderant. The parallel occurrence of upd(7q)mat and a DLK1/GTL2 hypomethylation in the same patient is a unique finding. Indeed, both disturbances might have occurred coincidentally, but it can also be hypothesized that the upd(7q)mat as the initial genomic mutation represents a trans-acting mutation causing an aberrant methylation in 14q32.  相似文献   

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