PCR and FISH analysis of a ring Y chromosome
β Scribed by Henegariu, Octavian; Kernek, Shannon; Keating, Michael A.; Palmer, Catherine G.; Heerema, Nyla A.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 218 KB
- Volume
- 69
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0148-7299
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A newborn male infant presented with midshaft hypospadias, chordee, and undescended left testis. Both gonads lacked the tunica albuginea and appeared to be adjacent to structures resembling fallopian tubes. On biopsy, there was marked dysgenesis of both gonads, with a paucity of testicular tubules and foci of ovarian-like stroma. Peripheral blood karyotype was 46,X,mar(Y) [39]/45,X [5]. Right gonadal biopsy material showed the same mosaicism but with a higher proportion of 45,X cells (46%). PCR and FISH analyses with primers/probes from different Yp, Yq, and Ycen loci defined the structure of the marker Y as a probable complex ring with breakpoints in Yq11.21 (very close to the centromere) and in Yp11.32 (the pseudoautosomal region). Based on the phenotype and the laboratory findings, the prognosis given to the patient was for short stature and azoospermia without an increased risk for gonadoblastomas.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Quantitative fluorescent polymerase chain reaction (QF-PCR) assays and small tandem repeat (STR) markers have been successfully employed for the rapid detection of major numerical aneuploidies affecting human autosomes. So far, the analysis of chromosomes X and Y disorders has been hampered by the r
We report the prenatal diagnosis of an apparently balanced de novo complex chromosome rearrangement (CCR) which involved nine breakpoints on four different chromosomes. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) and spectral karyotyping (SKY) were performed as an adjunct to G-banding for characteriza
A newborn female infant presented with abnormalities of the external genitalia including a 3 Γ 1 cm phallic structure, a perineal urethral opening, bifid scrotum, and a single urogenital opening. Peripheral blood karyotype was 45,X[81]/46,X,+r(Y)[19], however, there were no signs of Ullrich-Turner s