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Congenital diaphragmatic hernia and chromosome 15q26: determination of a candidate region by use of fluorescent in situ hybridization and array-based comparative genomic hybridization

Authors :
Natascha N T Goemaere
Dick Tibboel
R.R. de Krijger
Hannie Douben
H.J. Eussen
Robert Jan H. Galjaard
M. Klaassens
Ben A. Oostra
A.T. den Dekker
M. F. van Dooren
Charles Lee
Joost Wauters
Patricia K. Donahoe
Carine Wouters
A. de Klein
Pediatric Surgery
Clinical Genetics
Cardiology
Pathology
Source :
American Journal of Human Genetics, 76(5), 877-882. Cell Press, The American journal of human genetics
Publication Year :
2004

Abstract

Congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) has an incidence of 1 in 3,000 births and a high mortality rate (33%-58%). Multifactorial inheritance, teratogenic agents, and genetic abnormalities have all been suggested as possible etiologic factors. To define candidate regions for CDH, we analyzed cytogenetic data collected on 200 CDH cases, of which 7% and 5% showed numerical and structural abnormalities, respectively. This study focused on the most frequent structural anomaly found: a deletion on chromosome 15q. We analyzed material from three of our patients and from four previously published patients with CDH and a 15q deletion. By using array-based comparative genomic hybridization and fluorescent in situ hybridization to determine the boundaries of the deletions and by including data from two individuals with terminal 15q deletions but without CDH, we were able to exclude a substantial portion of the telomeric region from the genetic etiology of this disorder. Moreover, one patient with CDH harbored a small interstitial deletion. Together, these findings allowed us to define a minimal deletion region of similar to 5 Mb at chromosome 15q26.1-26.2. The region contains four known genes, of which two-NR2F2 and CHD2-are particularly intriguing gene candidates for CDH.

Details

ISSN :
00029297
Volume :
76
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American journal of human genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....856314fd778a8ea37ade6a9fbd8fb0c4