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Recurrent rearrangements of chromosome 1q21.1 and variable pediatric phenotypes

Authors :
Xavier Estivill
Charles E. Schwartz
Louise Gallagher
Karen Buysse
Soo Mi Park
Iris Casuga
Stefania Gimelli
Regina Regan
Zhaoshi Jiang
Carl Baker
Pasquale Striano
Heather C Mefford
Patrick Verloo
Joris A. Veltman
Giorgio Gimelli
Edward S. Tobias
Sabina Gallati
Jon McClellan
Corrado Romano
Chris Lilley
Kelly Li
Samantha J. L. Knight
Joris Vermeesch
William Reardon
Markus Schwerzmann
Roger E. Stevenson
Koenraad Norga
Martin Poot
Geert Mortier
Yves Spysschaert
Ellen van Binsbergen
Evan E. Eichler
Koenraad Devriendt
Lorraine Gaunt
Bernard Conrad
Lluís Armengol
Stuart Schwartz
Catherine Mercer
John Tolmie
Viv K. Maloney
Lionel Willatt
Antonietta Coppola
Santina Reitano
Susan M. Gribble
John C. K. Barber
Anja De Coene
Frank Speleman
Frédérique Béna
Andy Itsara
Ron Hochstenbach
Caifu Chen
Linde Goossens
Adam Broomer
Tom Walsh
John A. Crolla
Shuwen Huang
Thomy de Ravel
May Tassabehji
Helen V. Firth
Cindy Skinner
Amanda L. Collins
Ernie M.H.F. Bongers
Stylianos E. Antonarakis
Diana Baralle
Michael Gill
Bert B.A. de Vries
Mary Claire King
Jill Clayton-Smith
Nicole de Leeuw
Georgina Parkin
Serena Nik-Zainal
Jonathan Sebat
James S. Sutcliffe
Ingrid Simonic
Björn Menten
Mariangela Lo Giudice
Marco Fichera
Lorenz Räber
Raoul C.M. Hennekam
Sarju G. Mehta
Andrew J. Sharp
Alison Male
Marcel R. Nelen
C. Geoffrey Woods
Mefford, H.
Sharp, A.
Baker, C.
Itsara, A.
Jiang, Z.
Buysse, K.
Huang, S.
Maloney, V.
Crolla, J.
Baralle, D.
Collins, A.
Mercer, C.
Norga, K.
De Ravel, T.
Devriendt, K.
Bongers, E.
De Leeuw, N.
Reardon, W.
Gimelli, S.
Bena, F.
Hennekam, R.
Male, A.
Gaunt, L.
Clayton-Smith, J.
Simonic, I.
Park, S.
Mehta, S.
Nik-Zainal, S.
Woods, C.
Firth, H.
Parkin, G.
Fichera, M.
Reitano, S.
Lo Giudice, M.
Li, K.
Casuga, I.
Broomer, A.
Conrad, B.
Schwerzmann, M.
Räber, L.
Gallati, S.
Striano, P.
Coppola, A.
Tolmie, J.
Tobias, E.
Lilley, C.
Armengol, L.
Spysschaert, Y.
Verloo, P.
De Coene, A.
Goossens, L.
Mortier, G.
Speleman, F.
Van Binsbergen, E.
Nelen, M.
Hochstenbach, R.
Poot, M.
Gallagher, L.
Gill, M.
Mcclellan, J.
King, M. -C.
Regan, R.
Skinner, C.
Stevenson, R.
Antonarakis, S.
Chen, C.
Estivill, X.
Menten, B.
Gimelli, G.
Gribble, S.
Schwartz, S.
Sutcliffe, J.
Walsh, T.
Knight, S.
Sebat, J.
Romano, C.
Schwartz, C.
Veltman, J.
De Vries, B.
Vermeesch, J.
Barber, J.
Willatt, L.
Tassabehji, M.
Eichler, E.
Gimelli, Stefania
Conrad, Bernard
Antonarakis, Stylianos
ANS - Amsterdam Neuroscience
APH - Amsterdam Public Health
Paediatric Genetics
University of Groningen
Source :
The New England Journal of Medicine, 359, 1685-99, New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 359, No 16 (2008) pp. 1685-1699, New England journal of medicine, 359(16), 1685-U130. Massachussetts Medical Society, The New England Journal of Medicine, 359, 16, pp. 1685-99, ResearcherID, New England Journal of Medicine, 359(16), 1685-U130. MASSACHUSETTS MEDICAL SOC
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

PUBLISHED<br />Background Duplications and deletions in the human genome can cause disease or predispose persons to disease. Advances in technologies to detect these changes allow for the routine identification of submicroscopic imbalances in large numbers of patients. Methods We tested for the presence of microdeletions and microduplications at a specific region of chromosome 1q21.1 in two groups of patients with unexplained mental retardation, autism, or congenital anomalies and in unaffected persons. Results We identified 25 persons with a recurrent 1.35-Mb deletion within 1q21.1 from screening 5218 patients. The microdeletions had arisen de novo in eight patients, were inherited from a mildly affected parent in three patients, were inherited from an apparently unaffected parent in six patients, and were of unknown inheritance in eight patients. The deletion was absent in a series of 4737 control persons (P=1.1x10?7). We found considerable variability in the level of phenotypic expression of the microdeletion; phenotypes included mild-to-moderate mental retardation, microcephaly, cardiac abnormalities, and cataracts. The reciprocal duplication was enriched in nine children with mental retardation or autism spectrum disorder and other variable features (P=0.02). We identified three deletions and three duplications of the 1q21.1 region in an independent sample of 788 patients with mental retardation and congenital anomalies. Conclusions We have identified recurrent molecular lesions that elude syndromic classification and whose disease manifestations must be considered in a broader context of development as opposed to being assigned to a specific disease. Clinical diagnosis in patients with these lesions may be most readily achieved on the basis of genotype rather than phenotype.<br />Supported in part by grants from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) (HD043569, to Dr. Eichler), the South Carolina Department of Disabilities and Special Needs (to Drs. Skinner, Stevenson, and Schwartz), the Wellcome Trust (061183, to Dr. Tassabehji), the Andre & Cyprien Foundation and the University Hospitals of Geneva (to Drs. Antonarakis, Bena, and Gallati), and the European Union (EU) (project 219250, to Dr. Sharp; AnEUploidy project 037627, to Drs. Leeuw, Armengol, Antonarakis, Estivill, Veltman, and de Vries). The Irish Autism Study was funded by the Wellcome Trust and the Health Research Board (a grant to Drs. Gallagher and Gill). Dr. Poot was supported by a grant from the Dutch Foundation for Brain Research (Hersenstichting grant 2008(1) 34); Drs. Regan and Knight, by the Oxford Partnership Comprehensive Biomedical Research Centre; Dr. Willatt, by the Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre, with funding from the United Kingdom Department of Health's National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centres funding scheme; Drs. Huang and Maloney, as part of the National Genetics Reference Laboratory (Wessex) by the United Kingdom Department of Health; Ms. Buysse, as a research assistant of the Research Foundation?Flanders (FWO?Vlaanderen); and Dr. Eichler, as an investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.

Subjects

Subjects :
Male
Microcephaly
Genetics and epigenetic pathways of disease [NCMLS 6]
Congenital
Microcephaly/genetics
0302 clinical medicine
Gene Duplication
Gene duplication
HUMAN GENOME
genetics
ddc:576.5
Copy-number variation
Child
GeneralLiterature_REFERENCE(e.g.,dictionaries,encyclopedias,glossaries)
Heart Defects
Renal disorder [IGMD 9]
Psychiatry
Gene Rearrangement
Recombination, Genetic
Genetics
0303 health sciences
General Medicine
Microdeletion syndrome
Chromosomes, Human, Pair 1/ genetics
Heart Defects, Congenital/genetics
3. Good health
Phenotype
Chromosomes, Human, Pair 1
Autism spectrum disorder
congenital/genetics
Pair 1
Female
Chromosome Deletion
Functional Neurogenomics [DCN 2]
Human
Heart Defects, Congenital
SEGMENTAL DUPLICATIONS
MICRODELETION SYNDROME
Context (language use)
COPY-NUMBER VARIATION
Chromosomes
Article
Cataract
Congenital Abnormalities
Genomic disorders and inherited multi-system disorders [IGMD 3]
03 medical and health sciences
Genetic
Translational research [ONCOL 3]
Intellectual Disability
medicine
Humans
22Q11.2 DELETION SYNDROME
Autistic Disorder
030304 developmental biology
Congenital Abnormalities/ genetics
Chromosome Aberrations
Hereditary cancer and cancer-related syndromes [ONCOL 1]
business.industry
Genetic Variation
Autistic Disorder/ genetics
Gene rearrangement
medicine.disease
Recombination
Cataract/congenital/genetics
POLYMORPHISM
INDIVIDUALS
Genetic defects of metabolism [UMCN 5.1]
ATRIAL-FIBRILLATION
Autism
genetics, Cataract
congenital/genetics, Child, Chromosome Aberrations, Chromosome Deletion, Chromosomes
genetics, Congenital Abnormalities
genetics, Female, Gene Duplication, Gene Rearrangement, Genetic Variation, Heart Defects
genetics, Humans, Intellectual Disability
genetics, Male, Microcephaly
genetics, Phenotype, Recombination
Mental Retardation/ genetics
business
MENTAL-RETARDATION
ARRAY-CGH
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Immunity, infection and tissue repair [NCMLS 1]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00284793
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The New England Journal of Medicine, 359, 1685-99, New England Journal of Medicine, Vol. 359, No 16 (2008) pp. 1685-1699, New England journal of medicine, 359(16), 1685-U130. Massachussetts Medical Society, The New England Journal of Medicine, 359, 16, pp. 1685-99, ResearcherID, New England Journal of Medicine, 359(16), 1685-U130. MASSACHUSETTS MEDICAL SOC
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bce6f2f0e984a45b8d9aaf18602fd2a1