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Transmitted duplication of 8p23.1-8p23.2 associated with speech delay, autism and learning difficulties

Transmitted duplication of 8p23.1-8p23.2 associated with speech delay, autism and learning difficulties
Transmitted duplication of 8p23.1-8p23.2 associated with speech delay, autism and learning difficulties
Duplications of distal 8p with and without significant clinical phenotypes have been reported and are often associated with an unusual degree of structural complexity. Here, we present a duplication of 8p23.1–8p23.2 ascertained in a child with speech delay and a diagnosis of ICD-10 autism. The same duplication was found in his mother who had epilepsy and learning problems. A combination of cytogenetic, FISH, microsatellite, MLPA and oaCGH analysis was used to show that the duplication extended over a minimum of 6.8 Mb between 3 539 893 and 10 323 426 bp. This interval contains 32 novel and 41 known genes, of which only microcephalin (MCPH1) is a plausible candidate gene for autism at present. The distal breakpoint of the duplicated region interrupts the CSMD1 gene in 8p23.2 and the medial breakpoint lies between the MSRA and RP1L1 genes in 8p23.1.
An interchromosomal insertion between a normal and polymorphically inverted chromosome 8 is proposed to explain the origin of this duplication. Further mapped imbalances of distal 8p are needed to determine whether the autistic component of the phenotype in this family results from the cumulative imbalance of many genes or dosage imbalance of an individual susceptibility gene
autism, epilepsy, duplication, 8p23.1–8p23.2, array CGH, MCPH1
1018-4813
37-43
Glancy, Mary
98e567a2-d88b-4ed5-83a1-1d43f54bc074
Barnicoat, Angela
47a56eb3-d13b-41df-aaef-680d2a5181b4
Vijeratnam, Rajan
c76db6c0-d0d1-4f29-8486-3d363622fae7
de Souza, Sharon
b07c51a1-e025-45e5-86e3-8fe06550eab9
Gilmore, Joanne
3bb93c49-7fcf-429d-bb8f-a1fea385b349
Huang, Shuwen
44f28908-02b8-46d7-822c-e6a9e7981723
Maloney, Viv K.
a2d7cd03-153c-418a-855d-cf4a8d4e9a50
Thomas, N. Simon
1a601957-288d-4f12-a9f7-4f4279b7f9b3
Bunyan, David J.
dd9134b9-f889-44cc-83cc-a41fc5d74d69
Jackson, A.
98cb176a-f127-44dd-a549-ef650ce9c2fc
Barber, John C.K.
4785a6e4-bd63-4230-ab61-41a0ae12c761
Glancy, Mary
98e567a2-d88b-4ed5-83a1-1d43f54bc074
Barnicoat, Angela
47a56eb3-d13b-41df-aaef-680d2a5181b4
Vijeratnam, Rajan
c76db6c0-d0d1-4f29-8486-3d363622fae7
de Souza, Sharon
b07c51a1-e025-45e5-86e3-8fe06550eab9
Gilmore, Joanne
3bb93c49-7fcf-429d-bb8f-a1fea385b349
Huang, Shuwen
44f28908-02b8-46d7-822c-e6a9e7981723
Maloney, Viv K.
a2d7cd03-153c-418a-855d-cf4a8d4e9a50
Thomas, N. Simon
1a601957-288d-4f12-a9f7-4f4279b7f9b3
Bunyan, David J.
dd9134b9-f889-44cc-83cc-a41fc5d74d69
Jackson, A.
98cb176a-f127-44dd-a549-ef650ce9c2fc
Barber, John C.K.
4785a6e4-bd63-4230-ab61-41a0ae12c761

Glancy, Mary, Barnicoat, Angela, Vijeratnam, Rajan, de Souza, Sharon, Gilmore, Joanne, Huang, Shuwen, Maloney, Viv K., Thomas, N. Simon, Bunyan, David J., Jackson, A. and Barber, John C.K. (2009) Transmitted duplication of 8p23.1-8p23.2 associated with speech delay, autism and learning difficulties. European Journal of Human Genetics, 17 (1), 37-43. (doi:10.1038/ejhg.2008.133).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Duplications of distal 8p with and without significant clinical phenotypes have been reported and are often associated with an unusual degree of structural complexity. Here, we present a duplication of 8p23.1–8p23.2 ascertained in a child with speech delay and a diagnosis of ICD-10 autism. The same duplication was found in his mother who had epilepsy and learning problems. A combination of cytogenetic, FISH, microsatellite, MLPA and oaCGH analysis was used to show that the duplication extended over a minimum of 6.8 Mb between 3 539 893 and 10 323 426 bp. This interval contains 32 novel and 41 known genes, of which only microcephalin (MCPH1) is a plausible candidate gene for autism at present. The distal breakpoint of the duplicated region interrupts the CSMD1 gene in 8p23.2 and the medial breakpoint lies between the MSRA and RP1L1 genes in 8p23.1.
An interchromosomal insertion between a normal and polymorphically inverted chromosome 8 is proposed to explain the origin of this duplication. Further mapped imbalances of distal 8p are needed to determine whether the autistic component of the phenotype in this family results from the cumulative imbalance of many genes or dosage imbalance of an individual susceptibility gene

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More information

Published date: January 2009
Keywords: autism, epilepsy, duplication, 8p23.1–8p23.2, array CGH, MCPH1

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 69627
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/69627
ISSN: 1018-4813
PURE UUID: 50aa76d9-0cb6-465c-b09e-20e372b0f8b2

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Date deposited: 20 Nov 2009
Last modified: 13 Mar 2024 19:38

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Contributors

Author: Mary Glancy
Author: Angela Barnicoat
Author: Rajan Vijeratnam
Author: Sharon de Souza
Author: Joanne Gilmore
Author: Shuwen Huang
Author: Viv K. Maloney
Author: N. Simon Thomas
Author: David J. Bunyan
Author: A. Jackson
Author: John C.K. Barber

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