Interstitial 1q25.3-q31.3 deletion in a boy with mild manifestations
✍ Scribed by Pia Höglund; Reetta Jalkanen; Eino Marttinen; Tiina Alitalo
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 170 KB
- Volume
- 123A
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1552-4825
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
We describe a 4‐year‐old boy with an accessory right thumb, short and broad toes, cryptorchidism, micrognathia, abnormally modeled ears, and delayed speech development. The chromosome analysis of patient's peripheral blood lymphocytes by conventional GTG banding demonstrated a small deletion in the long arm of chromosome 1. Confirmation and defined localization of the deleted segment to chromosomal bands 1q25.3‐q31.3 was obtained by high resolution prometaphase analysis. Molecular studies, using a set of polymorphic chromosome 1q specific microsatellite markers, localized the deletion between the markers D1S2127 and D1S1727 on the paternally inherited chromosome 1. The maximum physical distance between these markers is approximately 21 Mb. The previously described two patients with 1q25‐q31 deletions both had severe clinical manifestations, just as the other 10 patients with the proposed “intermediate 1q deletion syndrome,” associated with 1q25‐q32 deletions. Distinct from all these patients, the clinical picture of our patient is markedly milder, i.e., without growth retardation, microcephaly, or clear mental retardation. © 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Rieger syndrome (RS; OMIM 180500) is a rare autosomal dominant disorder of morphogenesis, with ocular and systemic abnormalities and variability in phenotypic expression. Some patients with RS presented with a deletion of the band 4q25 to which the homeobox gene __PIT X2__ (former __RIE
A boy presented at 5 weeks with a syndrome of pre-and postnatal growth retardation, microcephaly, muscular hypotonia, and facial anomalies resembling those seen in Seckel syndrome or microcephalic primordial dwarfism I. Analysis of prometaphase chromosomes, fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH),