Submicroscopic deletions at 22q11.2: Variability of the clinical picture and delineation of a commonly deleted region
โ Scribed by Lindsay, Elizabeth A. ;Greenberg, Frank ;Shaffer, Lisa G. ;Shapira, Stuart K. ;Scambler, Peter J. ;Baldini, Antonio
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 680 KB
- Volume
- 56
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0148-7299
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โฆ Synopsis
DiGeorge anomaly (DGA) and velo-cardiofacial syndrome (VCFS) are frequently associated with monosomy of chromosome region 22qll. Most patients have a submicroscopic deletion, recently estimated to be at least 1-2 Mb. It is not clear whether individuals who present with only some of the features of these conditions have the deletion, and if so, whether the size of the deletion varies from those with more classic phenotypes. We have used fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) to assess the deletion status of 85 individuals referred to us for molecular analysis, with a wide range of DGA-like or VCFS-like clinical features. The test probe used was the cosmid scll.1, which detects two loci about 2 Mb apart in 22q11.2. Twenty-four patients carried the deletion. Of the deleted patients, most had classic DGA or VCFS phenotypes, but 6 deleted patients had mild phenotypes, including 2 with minor facial anomalies and velopharyngeal incompetence as the only presenting signs. Despite the great phenotypic variability among the deleted patients, none had a deletion smaller than the 2-Mb region defined by scll.1. Smaller deletions were not detected in patients with particularly suggestive phenotypes who were not deleted for scll.1, even when tested with two other probes from the DGANCFS region.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The apparent lack of genotype/phenotype correlation in patients with the DiGeorge anomaly and velocardiofacial syndrome (DGA/VCFS; the "22q11 deletion syndrome") indicates a complex genetic condition. Most cases, whatever the phenotype, have a 1.5-3 ## Mb chromosomal deletion that includes the mini
## Abstract In this article, I present an updated account that attempts to explain, in cognitive processing and neural terms, the nonverbal intellectual impairments experienced by most children with deletions of chromosome 22q11.2. Specifically, I propose that this genetic syndrome leads to early d