Back to Search
Start Over
Paternal isodisomy 7q secondary to monosomy 7 at recurrence in a Down syndrome child with acute myelogenous leukemia
- Source :
- Cancer genetics and cytogenetics. 134(2)
- Publication Year :
- 2002
-
Abstract
- We report a boy with Down syndrome and leukemia who acquired uniparental isodisomy of chromosome 7q as a secondary chromosomal change during recurrence of the disease. His karyotype before therapy was 46,XY,der(1)t(1;1)(p36;q32),−7,+21c[17]/46,idem,del(9)(p22)[10], whereas at recurrence it was 46,XY,der(1)t(1;1)(p36;q32,−7,der(7)(qter→p22∼pter::q10→qter),del(9)(p22),+21c[13]/47,XY,+21c[2]. By using polymerase chain reaction amplification of D7S493 and D7S527 markers, we identified the loss of the maternal chromosome 7 with a consequent paternal isodisomy in the clone with dup7q. This rearrangement could be implicated in the progression of the disease by causing (1) nullisomy for a gene or genes located on 7p22→pter, (2) functional double doses of exclusively paternal expressed genes, and (3) restoration of the effects produced by haploinsufficiency of biparental expressed genes.
- Subjects :
- Male
Cancer Research
Down syndrome
Aneuploidy
Biology
Genetics
medicine
Humans
Molecular Biology
In Situ Hybridization, Fluorescence
Chromosome 7 (human)
Polymorphism, Genetic
Karyotype
Uniparental Disomy
medicine.disease
Molecular biology
Uniparental disomy
Chromosome Banding
Leukemia, Myeloid, Acute
Uniparental Isodisomy
Child, Preschool
Down Syndrome
Haploinsufficiency
Trisomy
Chromosomes, Human, Pair 7
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 01654608
- Volume :
- 134
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Cancer genetics and cytogenetics
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....5b30f03b57fab9528d2be00e805af2d9