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Phenotype-genotype correlations in 17 new patients with an Xp11.23p11.22 microduplication and review of the literature

Authors :
Fabienne Giuliano
Olivier Pichon
Lucile Pinson
Bénédicte Duban-Bedu
Valérie Malan
Emilie Bourel-Ponchel
Rima Nabbout
Mathilde Nizon
Delphine Héron
Marlène Rio
Béatrice Bourgois
Odile Boute
Alice Goldenberg
Sarah Grotto
Sylvie Nusbaum
Odile Raoul
Catherine Turleau
Eric Le Galloudec
Joris Andrieux
Houda Karmous-Benailly
Bruno Delobel
Marie-Christine de Blois
Boris Keren
Martine Le Merrer
Laurence Colleaux
Cédric Le Caignec
Albert David
Serge Romana
Jean-Michel Lapierre
Agnès Roubertie
Didier Lacombe
Caroline Rooryck
Michel Vekemans
Michèle Mathieu-Dramard
Anne-Gaëlle Le Moing
Source :
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A. 167:111-122
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Wiley, 2014.

Abstract

Array comparative genomic hybridization (array CGH) has proven its utility in uncovering cryptic rearrangements in patients with X-linked intellectual disability. In 2009, Giorda et al. identified inherited and de novo recurrent Xp11.23p11.22 microduplications in two males and six females from a wide cohort of patients presenting with syndromic intellectual disability. To date, 14 females and 5 males with an overlapping microduplication have been reported in the literature. To further characterize this emerging syndrome, we collected clinical and microarray data from 17 new patients, 10 females, and 7 males. The Xp11.23p11.2 microduplications detected by array CGH ranged in size from 331 Kb to 8.9 Mb. Five patients harbored 4.5 Mb recurrent duplications mediated by non-allelic homologous recombination between segmental duplications and 12 harbored atypical duplications. The chromosomal rearrangement occurred de novo in eight patients and was inherited in six affected males from three families. Patients shared several common major characteristics including moderate to severe intellectual disability, early onset of puberty, language impairment, and age related epileptic syndromes such as West syndrome and focal epilepsy with activation during sleep evolving in some patients to continuous spikes-and-waves during slow sleep. Atypical microduplications allowed us to identify minimal critical regions that might be responsible for specific clinical findings of the syndrome and to suggest possible candidate genes: FTSJ1 and SHROOM4 for intellectual disability along with PQBP1 and SLC35A2 for epilepsy. Xp11.23p11.22 microduplication is a recently-recognized syndrome associated with intellectual disability, epilepsy, and early onset of puberty in females. In this study, we propose several genes that could contribute to the phenotype.

Details

ISSN :
15524825
Volume :
167
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f978123b2d200bc2c3ec23780350be27
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.a.36807