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Five patients with novel overlapping interstitial deletions in 8q22.2q22.3
Authors:Kuechler Alma  Buysse Karen  Clayton-Smith Jill  Le Caignec Cédric  David Albert  Engels Hartmut  Kohlhase Jürgen  Mari Francesca  Mortier Geert  Renieri Alessandra  Wieczorek Dagmar
Institution:1. Center for Medical Genetics, Ghent University Hospital, Ghent, Belgium;2. Department of Medical Genetics, St. Mary's Hospital, Manchester, UK;3. CHU Nantes, Service de Génétique Médicale, Nantes, France;4. INSERM, UMR915, l'institut du thorax, CNRS, ERL3147, and Université de Nantes, Nantes, France;5. Institut für Humangenetik, Rheinische Friedrich‐Wilhelms‐Universit?t, Bonn, Germany;6. Praxis für Humangenetik, Freiburg, Germany;7. Medical Genetics Unit, University of Siena, Siena, Italy;8. Department of Medical Genetics, Antwerp University Hospital, Antwerp, Belgium;9. Institut für Humangenetik, Universit?tsklinikum Essen, Essen, Germany
Abstract:High‐resolution microarray technology has facilitated the detection of submicroscopic chromosome aberrations and characterization of new microdeletion syndromes. We present clinical and molecular data of five patients with previously undescribed overlapping interstitial deletions involving 8q22.2q22.3. All deletions differ in size and breakpoints. Patients 1–4 carry deletions between 5.25 and 6.44 Mb in size, resulting in a minimal deletion overlap of 3.87 Mb (from 100.69 to 104.56 Mb; hg18) comprising at least 25 genes. These patients share similar facial dysmorphisms with blepharophimosis, telecanthus, epicanthus, flat malar region, thin upper lip vermillion, down‐turned corners of the mouth, and a poor facial movement/little facial expression. They have a moderate to severe developmental delay (4/4), absent speech (3/4), microcephaly (3/4), a history of seizures (3/4), postnatal short stature (2/4), and a diaphragmatic or hiatal hernia (2/4). Patient 5 was diagnosed with a smaller deletion of about 1.92 Mb (containing nine genes) localized within the deletion overlap of the other four patients. Patient 5 shows a different facial phenotype and a less severe mental retardation. In Patients 1–4, COH1 is involved in the deletion (in total or in part), but none of them showed clinical features of Cohen syndrome. In two patients (Patients 2 and 4), ZFPM2 (also called FOG2, a candidate gene for congenital diaphragmatic hernias) was partly deleted. We suggest that patients with a microdeletion of 8q22.2q22.3 may represent a clinically recognizable condition characterized particularly by the facial phenotype and developmental delay. More patients have to be evaluated to establish a phenotype–genotype correlation. © 2011 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
Keywords:microdeletion 8q22  2q22  3  facial dysmorphism  mental retardation  seizures  diaphragmatic hernia  molecular karyotyping
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