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Refinement of causative genes in monosomy 1p36 through clinical and molecular cytogenetic characterization of small interstitial deletions

Refinement of causative genes in monosomy 1p36 through clinical and molecular cytogenetic characterization of small interstitial deletions
Refinement of causative genes in monosomy 1p36 through clinical and molecular cytogenetic characterization of small interstitial deletions
Monosomy 1p36 is the most common terminal deletion syndrome seen in humans, occurring in 1 in 5,000 live births. Common features include mental retardation, characteristic dysmorphic features, hypotonia, seizures, hearing loss, heart defects, cardiomyopathy, and behavior abnormalities. Similar phenotypes are seen among patients with a variety of deletion sizes, including terminal and interstitial deletions, complex rearrangements, and unbalanced translocations. Consequently, critical regions harboring causative genes for each of these features have been difficult to identify. Here we report on five individuals with 200-823 kb overlapping deletions of proximal 1p36.33, four of which are apparently de novo. They present with features of monosomy 1p36, including developmental delay and mental retardation, dysmorphic features, hypotonia, behavioral abnormalities including hyperphagia, and seizures. The smallest region of deletion overlap is 174 kb and contains five genes; these genes are likely candidates for some of the phenotypic features in monosomy 1p36. Other genes deleted in a subset of the patients likely play a contributory role in the phenotypes, including GABRD and seizures, PRKCZ and neurologic features, and SKI and dysmorphic and neurologic features. Characterization of small deletions is important for narrowing critical intervals and for the identification of causative or candidate genes for features of monosomy 1p36 syndrome.
1p36, interstitial deletion, monosomy, gabrd, prkcz, ski
1552-4825
1951-1959
Rosenfeld, Jill A.
718bacb4-744a-4023-bb03-a3a1f8ea8d71
Crolla, John A.
c5f23751-8de9-4a55-9cc5-ca2fb635769c
Tomkins, Susan
ee6f8f5a-1b40-43d9-a623-f821ef737a05
Bader, Patricia
a3f6c74d-f9a7-4814-9c94-8983ea0c6ddb
Morrow, Bernice
e4c0cd98-2274-4451-af50-809947823fec
Gorski, Jerome
3a96c34e-1327-45c0-b5d9-69a3d88d49ab
Troxell, Robin
c5530f53-7c84-479f-bc8c-f285564d2c38
Forster-Gibson, Cynthia
806e7a56-1f8e-44ac-8c14-469c8ebd94f3
Cilliers, Deirdre
58d7fbc7-9f32-4ac5-bd04-d56b36e6afcd
Hislop, R. Gordon
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Lamb, Allen
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Torchia, Beth
e33f20c3-a53c-4488-93ce-ba61b73d533b
Ballif, Blake C.
26502010-9e5e-46ce-8b52-9c6c1cdb4cff
Shaffer, Lisa G.
fde8d587-b68a-4913-9ac9-a77818b0fb4e
Rosenfeld, Jill A.
718bacb4-744a-4023-bb03-a3a1f8ea8d71
Crolla, John A.
c5f23751-8de9-4a55-9cc5-ca2fb635769c
Tomkins, Susan
ee6f8f5a-1b40-43d9-a623-f821ef737a05
Bader, Patricia
a3f6c74d-f9a7-4814-9c94-8983ea0c6ddb
Morrow, Bernice
e4c0cd98-2274-4451-af50-809947823fec
Gorski, Jerome
3a96c34e-1327-45c0-b5d9-69a3d88d49ab
Troxell, Robin
c5530f53-7c84-479f-bc8c-f285564d2c38
Forster-Gibson, Cynthia
806e7a56-1f8e-44ac-8c14-469c8ebd94f3
Cilliers, Deirdre
58d7fbc7-9f32-4ac5-bd04-d56b36e6afcd
Hislop, R. Gordon
85445027-b8af-4533-8477-c16b7bad4266
Lamb, Allen
14d65d48-9277-46e0-8f8b-ddf0f304f226
Torchia, Beth
e33f20c3-a53c-4488-93ce-ba61b73d533b
Ballif, Blake C.
26502010-9e5e-46ce-8b52-9c6c1cdb4cff
Shaffer, Lisa G.
fde8d587-b68a-4913-9ac9-a77818b0fb4e

Rosenfeld, Jill A., Crolla, John A., Tomkins, Susan, Bader, Patricia, Morrow, Bernice, Gorski, Jerome, Troxell, Robin, Forster-Gibson, Cynthia, Cilliers, Deirdre, Hislop, R. Gordon, Lamb, Allen, Torchia, Beth, Ballif, Blake C. and Shaffer, Lisa G. (2010) Refinement of causative genes in monosomy 1p36 through clinical and molecular cytogenetic characterization of small interstitial deletions. American Journal of Medical Genetics part A, 152A (8), 1951-1959. (doi:10.1002/ajmg.a.33516).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Monosomy 1p36 is the most common terminal deletion syndrome seen in humans, occurring in 1 in 5,000 live births. Common features include mental retardation, characteristic dysmorphic features, hypotonia, seizures, hearing loss, heart defects, cardiomyopathy, and behavior abnormalities. Similar phenotypes are seen among patients with a variety of deletion sizes, including terminal and interstitial deletions, complex rearrangements, and unbalanced translocations. Consequently, critical regions harboring causative genes for each of these features have been difficult to identify. Here we report on five individuals with 200-823 kb overlapping deletions of proximal 1p36.33, four of which are apparently de novo. They present with features of monosomy 1p36, including developmental delay and mental retardation, dysmorphic features, hypotonia, behavioral abnormalities including hyperphagia, and seizures. The smallest region of deletion overlap is 174 kb and contains five genes; these genes are likely candidates for some of the phenotypic features in monosomy 1p36. Other genes deleted in a subset of the patients likely play a contributory role in the phenotypes, including GABRD and seizures, PRKCZ and neurologic features, and SKI and dysmorphic and neurologic features. Characterization of small deletions is important for narrowing critical intervals and for the identification of causative or candidate genes for features of monosomy 1p36 syndrome.

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More information

Published date: 15 July 2010
Keywords: 1p36, interstitial deletion, monosomy, gabrd, prkcz, ski

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 161293
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/161293
ISSN: 1552-4825
PURE UUID: fd26c9ab-1097-47d9-820d-f8086f579799

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Date deposited: 27 Jul 2010 14:09
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 01:59

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Contributors

Author: Jill A. Rosenfeld
Author: John A. Crolla
Author: Susan Tomkins
Author: Patricia Bader
Author: Bernice Morrow
Author: Jerome Gorski
Author: Robin Troxell
Author: Cynthia Forster-Gibson
Author: Deirdre Cilliers
Author: R. Gordon Hislop
Author: Allen Lamb
Author: Beth Torchia
Author: Blake C. Ballif
Author: Lisa G. Shaffer

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