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Clinical and molecular delineation of the Greig cephalopolysyndactyly contiguous gene deletion syndrome and its distinction from acrocallosal syndrome

✍ Scribed by Johnston, Jennifer J. ;Olivos-Glander, Isabelle ;Turner, Joyce ;Aleck, Kyrieckos ;Bird, Lynne M. ;Mehta, Lakshmi ;Schimke, R. Neil ;Heilstedt, Heidi ;Spence, J. Edward ;Blancato, Jan ;Biesecker, Leslie G.


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
202 KB
Volume
123A
Category
Article
ISSN
0148-7299

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Greig cephalopolysyndactyly syndrome (GCPS) is caused by haploinsufficiency of GLI3 on 7p13. Features of GCPS include polydactyly, macrocephaly, and hypertelorism, and may be associated with cognitive deficits and abnormalities of the corpus callosum. GLI3 mutations in GCPS patients include point, frameshift, translocation, and gross deletion mutations. FISH and STRP analyses were applied to 34 patients with characteristics of GCPS. Deletions were identified in 11 patients and the extent of their deletion was determined. Nine patients with deletions had mental retardation (MR) or developmental delay (DD) and were classified as severe GCPS. These severe GCPS patients have manifestations that overlap with the acrocallosal syndrome (ACLS). The deletion breakpoints were analyzed in six patients whose deletions ranged in size from 151 kb to 10.6 Mb. Junction fragments were found to be distinct with no common sequences flanking the breakpoints. We conclude that patients with GCPS caused by large deletions that include GLI3 are likely to have cognitive deficits, and we hypothesize that this severe GCPS phenotype is caused by deletion of contiguous genes. Β© 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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## Abstract We report on a patient with an interstitial deletion of the long arm of chromosome 2 at 2q31.2q33.2. She had prenatal and postnatal growth retardation, microcephaly, facial dysmorphism, cleft palate, camptodactyly, bilateral talipes equinovarus, severe intellectual disability, and ectod