Ting Wen, Gulsen Akay, Janice Palumbos, Betsy Ostrander, Denise I Quigley, Allen N Lamb, Erica F Andersen, Bo Hong, David Viskochil
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Vertical inheritance and unique differential phenotypes of reciprocal recombinant chromosome 18 within a multi-generation family.
Carriers of balanced pericentric inversions are at risk for producing unbalanced gametes because of meiotic recombination resulting in de novo deletion and duplication of distal chromosome ends. Recombinant chromosomes generally lead to significant imbalances resulting in anomalous clinical phenotypes in offspring, hence they are typically not inherited. Therefore, the vertical transmission of recombinant chromosomes is a clinically rare event. Using genomic microarray and karyotyping, we describe inheritance of recombinant chromosomes in a three-generation family with the grandmother carrying a mosaic pericentric inversion of chromosome 18. Three children inherited the balanced inversion and one child with a mild phenotype inherited a de novo recombinant chromosome 18. In the third generation, a newborn with a variant of holoprosencephaly inherited an unmodified recombinant chromosome from her mother. Despite having the same karyotype predicting loss of the TGIF1 gene from the 18p terminus, the mother exhibits a relatively unaffected phenotype. The cousin of the child with holoprosencephaly carries the reciprocal recombinant chromosome 18 with a much milder phenotype. We verified the cytogenetic mechanism and corresponding clinical phenotypes in affected individuals and illustrated possible recombinant chromosome consequences of the inversion of chromosome 18 in this three-generation family.
期刊介绍:
The European Journal of Human Genetics is the official journal of the European Society of Human Genetics, publishing high-quality, original research papers, short reports and reviews in the rapidly expanding field of human genetics and genomics. It covers molecular, clinical and cytogenetics, interfacing between advanced biomedical research and the clinician, and bridging the great diversity of facilities, resources and viewpoints in the genetics community.
Key areas include:
-Monogenic and multifactorial disorders
-Development and malformation
-Hereditary cancer
-Medical Genomics
-Gene mapping and functional studies
-Genotype-phenotype correlations
-Genetic variation and genome diversity
-Statistical and computational genetics
-Bioinformatics
-Advances in diagnostics
-Therapy and prevention
-Animal models
-Genetic services
-Community genetics