We describe the clinical manifestations and molecular cytogenetic analyses of three patients with a similar distal deletion of chromosome 8. Each child had mild developmental delay and subtle minor anomalies. Two had cardiac anomalies but no other major congenital anomalies were present. High resolu
Prenatal detection and mapping of a distal 8p deletion associated with congenital heart disease
β Scribed by Sangeeta N. Bhatia; Veena Suri; Albert Bundy; Celeste M. Krauss
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 630 KB
- Volume
- 19
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0197-3851
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β¦ Synopsis
We report the prenatal diagnosis, at 18 weeks' gestational age of a del(8)(p23.1<pter) in a fetus with an atrio-ventricular canal, persistent left superior vena cava and hypoplastic right ventricle detected by sonographic imaging. We further refine the breakpoints associated with this defect using fluorescent in situ hybridization analysis (FISH). Our findings correlate with recent reports of the localization and importance of GATA4 (a zinc finger transcription factor) in cardiac development. Though microcephaly, mental retardation and typical behavioural features are well described in various deletions in 8p, the absence of notable microcephaly in this case raises the possibility for a separate genetic aetiology for some of these features. Indeed, primary autosomal recessive microcephaly (MCPH1) was recently mapped to a nearby region and may be the cause for this frequent observation in some cases of 8p deletions. These observations illustrate the role of FISH in prenatal diagnosis and refinement of chromosomal breakpoints. In addition, mappings of loci significant for cardiac development are presented. Our findings suggest that some features of the 8p deletion syndrome may ultimately be uncoupled from one another, and underscore the need for further study of this region of chromosome 8, in order to achieve adequate information for genetic counselling.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
We report an infant with multiple congenital anomalies, including craniosynostosis, tetralogy of Fallot variant, and limb anomalies associated with a maternal deletion of 15q15-22.1. Only two other patients have been reported with a similar deletion, but the deletion was paternal in both cases. We r
Previous studies have shown that patients with deletion of distal human chromosome arm 8p may have congenital heart disease and other physical anomalies. The gene encoding GATA-4, a zinc finger transcription factor implicated in cardiac gene expression and development, localizes to chromosome region