We report a recurrent microdeletion syndrome causing mental retardation, epilepsy and variable facial and digital dysmorphisms. We describe nine affected individuals, including six probands: two with de novo deletions, two who inherited the deletion from an affected parent and two with unknown inheritance. The proximal breakpoint of the largest deletion is contiguous with breakpoint 3 (BP3) of the Prader-Willi and Angelman syndrome region, extending 3.95 Mb distally to BP5. A smaller 1.5-Mb deletion has a proximal breakpoint within the larger deletion (BP4) and shares the same distal BP5. This recurrent 1.5-Mb deletion contains six genes, including a candidate gene for epilepsy (CHRNA7) that is probably responsible for the observed seizure phenotype. The BP4-BP5 region undergoes frequent inversion, suggesting a possible link between this inversion polymorphism and recurrent deletion. The frequency of these microdeletions in mental retardation cases is approximately 0.3\% (6/2,082 tested), a prevalence comparable to that of Williams, Angelman and Prader-Willi syndromes.

A recurrent 15q13.3 microdeletion syndrome associated with mental retardation and seizures.

CICCONE, ROBERTO;
2008-01-01

Abstract

We report a recurrent microdeletion syndrome causing mental retardation, epilepsy and variable facial and digital dysmorphisms. We describe nine affected individuals, including six probands: two with de novo deletions, two who inherited the deletion from an affected parent and two with unknown inheritance. The proximal breakpoint of the largest deletion is contiguous with breakpoint 3 (BP3) of the Prader-Willi and Angelman syndrome region, extending 3.95 Mb distally to BP5. A smaller 1.5-Mb deletion has a proximal breakpoint within the larger deletion (BP4) and shares the same distal BP5. This recurrent 1.5-Mb deletion contains six genes, including a candidate gene for epilepsy (CHRNA7) that is probably responsible for the observed seizure phenotype. The BP4-BP5 region undergoes frequent inversion, suggesting a possible link between this inversion polymorphism and recurrent deletion. The frequency of these microdeletions in mental retardation cases is approximately 0.3\% (6/2,082 tested), a prevalence comparable to that of Williams, Angelman and Prader-Willi syndromes.
2008
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Inglese
Internazionale
40
322
328
6
Adolescent, Child, Child; Preschool, Chromosome Breakage, Chromosomes; Human; Pair 15, Female, Gene Deletion, Gene Frequency, Humans, Inheritance Patterns, Intellectual Disability; genetics, Male, Pedigree, Receptors; Nicotinic; genetics, Seizures; genetics, Syndrome
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/ng.93
34
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
A. J., Sharp; H. C., Mefford; K., Li; C., Baker; C., Skinner; R. E., Stevenson; R. J., Schroer; F., Novara; M. D., Gregori; Ciccone, Roberto; A., Broo...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/497469
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