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A t(2;19)(p13;p13.2) in a giant invasive cardiac lipoma from a patient with multiple lipomatosis

✍ Scribed by Carl J. Vaughan; Stanislawa Weremowicz; Marsha M. Goldstein; Mairead Casey; Matt Hart; Rebecca T. Hahn; Richard B. Devereux; Leonard Girardi; Frederick J. Schoen; Jonathan A. Fletcher; Cynthia C. Morton; Craig T. Basson


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
241 KB
Volume
28
Category
Article
ISSN
1045-2257

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✦ Synopsis


Cardiac lipomas occur infrequently but account for a significant portion of rare cardiac tumors. Common cutaneous lipomas have previously been associated with rearrangements of chromosome band 12q15, which often disrupt the high-mobility-group protein gene HMGIC. In this report, we describe the cytogenetic analysis of an unusual giant cardiac lipoma that exhibited myocardial invasion in a patient with a history of multiple lipomatosis (cutaneous lipoma, lipomatous gynecomastia, lipomatous hypertrophy of the interatrial septum, and dyslipidemia). Cytogenetic studies of cells derived from the cardiac lipoma demonstrated no abnormalities of chromosome 12, but did reveal a t(2;19)(p13;p13.2). A liposarcoma-derived oncogene (p115-RhoGEF) previously mapped to chromosome 19 and the low-density lipoprotein receptor gene (LDLR) previously mapped to chromosome band 19p13 were evaluated to determine whether they were disrupted by this translocation. Fluorescence in situ hybridization analyses assigned p115-RhoGEF to chromosome 19 in bands q13.2-q13.3 and mapped the LDLR to chromosome arm 19p in segment 13.2, but centromeric to the t(2;19) breakpoint. Thus, these genes are unlikely to be involved in the t(2;19)(p13;p13.2). Further studies of the regions of chromosomes 2 and 19 perturbed by the translocation in this unusual infiltrating cardiac lipoma will identify gene(s) that participate in adipocyte growth and differentiation and may provide insight into syndromes of multiple lipomatosis.


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