Literature DB >> 16724013

A fascination with chromosome rescue in uniparental disomy: Mendelian recessive outlaws and imprinting copyrights infringements.

Eric Engel1.   

Abstract

With uniparental disomy (UPD), the presence in a diploid genome of a chromosome pair derived from one genitor carries two main types of developmental risk: the inheritance of a recessive trait or the occurrence of an imprinting disorder. When the uniparentally derived pair carries two homozygous sequences (isodisomy) with a duplicated mutant, this 'reduction to homozygosity' determines a recessive phenotype solely inherited from one heterozygote. Thus far, some 40 examples of such recessive trait transmission have been reported in the medical literature and, among the current 32 known types of UPDs, UPD of chromosomes 1, 2, and 7 have contributed to the larger contingent of these conditions. Being at variance with the traditional mode of transmission, they constitute a group of 'Mendelian outlaws'. Several imprinted chromosome domains and loci have been, for a large part, identified through different UPDs. Thus, disomies for paternal 6, maternal 7, paternal 11, paternal and maternal 14 and 15, maternal 20 (and paternal 20q) and possibly maternal 16 cause as many syndromes, as at the biological level the loss or duplication of monoparentally expressed allele sequences constitutes 'imprinting rights infringements'. The above pitfalls represent the price to pay when, instead of a Mendelian even segregation and independent assortment of the chromosomes, the fertilized product with a nondisjunctional meiotic error undergoes correction (for unknown or fortuitous reasons) through a mitotic adjustment as a means to restore euploidy, thereby resulting in UPD. Happily enough, UPDs leading to the healthy rescue from some chromosomal mishaps also exist.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16724013     DOI: 10.1038/sj.ejhg.5201619

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Hum Genet        ISSN: 1018-4813            Impact factor:   4.246


  37 in total

1.  On the paternal origin of trisomy 21 Down syndrome.

Authors:  Maj A Hultén; Suketu D Patel; Magnus Westgren; Nikos Papadogiannakis; Anna Maria Jonsson; Jon Jonasson; Erik Iwarsson
Journal:  Mol Cytogenet       Date:  2010-02-23       Impact factor: 2.009

2.  An unexpected transmission of von Willebrand disease type 3: the first case of maternal uniparental disomy 12.

Authors:  Pierre Boisseau; Mathilde Giraud; Catherine Ternisien; Agnès Veyradier; Edith Fressinaud; Armelle Lefrancois; Stéphane Bezieau; Marc Fouassier
Journal:  Haematologica       Date:  2011-07-12       Impact factor: 9.941

3.  Complete maternal isodisomy of chromosome 5 in a Japanese patient with Netherton syndrome.

Authors:  Sanae Numata; Takahiro Hamada; Kwesi Teye; Mitsuhiro Matsuda; Norito Ishii; Tadashi Karashima; Kenji Kabashima; Minao Furumura; Chika Ohata; Takashi Hashimoto
Journal:  J Invest Dermatol       Date:  2013-09-16       Impact factor: 8.551

4.  Donnai-Barrow syndrome (DBS/FOAR) in a child with a homozygous LRP2 mutation due to complete chromosome 2 paternal isodisomy.

Authors:  Sibel Kantarci; Nicola K Ragge; N Simon Thomas; David O Robinson; Kristin M Noonan; Meaghan K Russell; Dian Donnai; F Lucy Raymond; Christopher A Walsh; Patricia K Donahoe; Barbara R Pober
Journal:  Am J Med Genet A       Date:  2008-07-15       Impact factor: 2.802

5.  Hidden Markov models for the assessment of chromosomal alterations using high-throughput SNP arrays.

Authors:  Robert B Scharpf; Giovanni Parmigiani; Jonathan Pevsner; Ingo Ruczinski
Journal:  Ann Appl Stat       Date:  2008-06-01       Impact factor: 2.083

6.  Mosaic uniparental disomies and aneuploidies as large structural variants of the human genome.

Authors:  Benjamín Rodríguez-Santiago; Núria Malats; Nathaniel Rothman; Lluís Armengol; Montse Garcia-Closas; Manolis Kogevinas; Olaya Villa; Amy Hutchinson; Julie Earl; Gaëlle Marenne; Kevin Jacobs; Daniel Rico; Adonina Tardón; Alfredo Carrato; Gilles Thomas; Alfonso Valencia; Debra Silverman; Francisco X Real; Stephen J Chanock; Luis A Pérez-Jurado
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2010-07-09       Impact factor: 11.025

7.  Severe nondominant hereditary spherocytosis due to uniparental isodisomy at the SPTA1 locus.

Authors:  Hannah Bogardus; Vincent P Schulz; Yelena Maksimova; Barbara A Miller; Peining Li; Bernard G Forget; Patrick G Gallagher
Journal:  Haematologica       Date:  2014-06-03       Impact factor: 9.941

8.  Mechanisms of mosaicism, chimerism and uniparental disomy identified by single nucleotide polymorphism array analysis.

Authors:  Laura K Conlin; Brian D Thiel; Carsten G Bonnemann; Livija Medne; Linda M Ernst; Elaine H Zackai; Matthew A Deardorff; Ian D Krantz; Hakon Hakonarson; Nancy B Spinner
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2010-01-06       Impact factor: 6.150

9.  Parthenogenetic chimaerism/mosaicism with a Silver-Russell syndrome-like phenotype.

Authors:  K Yamazawa; K Nakabayashi; M Kagami; T Sato; S Saitoh; R Horikawa; N Hizuka; T Ogata
Journal:  J Med Genet       Date:  2010-08-03       Impact factor: 6.318

10.  Practice guidelines for the molecular analysis of Prader-Willi and Angelman syndromes.

Authors:  Simon C Ramsden; Jill Clayton-Smith; Rachael Birch; Karin Buiting
Journal:  BMC Med Genet       Date:  2010-05-11       Impact factor: 2.103

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