Literature DB >> 18546282

A 7 Mb duplication at 22q13 in a girl with bipolar disorder and hippocampal malformation.

Tiziano Pramparo1, Manuela de Gregori, Stefania Gimelli, Roberto Ciccone, Domenico Frondizi, Thomas Liehr, Simona Pellacani, Gabriele Masi, Paola Brovedani, Orsetta Zuffardi, Renzo Guerrini.   

Abstract

We identified a duplication of 22q13.1-q13.2 in a 10-year-old girl and demonstrated that this duplication was the recombinant product of a maternal intrachromosomal insertion. Phenotypic characteristics included prominent forehead, small low-set ears, hypertelorism, epicanthal folds, small palpebral fissures, short philtrum, and syndactyly. MRI of the brain revealed high signal abnormalities in the periventricular white matter, a hypoplastic corpus callosum, under-rotated hippocampus on the left and atrophic hippocampus on the right. Since age 5, the child's behavior has shown cyclic maniacal episodes with severely disorganized mood and behavior. Psychiatric and cognitive assessment led to a diagnosis of bipolar disorder not otherwise specified, manic episodes, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and moderate mental retardation. Array-CGH revealed an interstitial duplication of 6.9 Mb at chromosome 22q: dup(22)(q13.1q13.2). FISH using BAC clones confirmed the array-CGH results and demonstrated that the duplication was inverted. G-banding analysis in the proposita's mother revealed a banding pattern suggestive of an intrachromosomal insertion, as demonstrated by dual-color FISH with BACs that were duplicated in the proposita and multicolor-banding (MCB) based on microdissection derived region-specific libraries for chromosome 22. Our findings suggest that in both seemingly de novo deletions and duplications, the parent transmitting the imbalance should be investigated for possible balanced rearrangements. This report reinforces previous evidence that chromosome imbalances, and thus gene dosage effects, may be at the basis of some psychiatric disorders. Stringent correlations between submicroscopic imbalances, specific behavioral phenotypes and brain imaging will possibly help in dissecting complex behavioral traits. (c) 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18546282     DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.a.32326

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Med Genet A        ISSN: 1552-4825            Impact factor:   2.802


  4 in total

1.  22q13 Microduplication Syndrome in Siblings with Mild Clinical Phenotype: Broadening the Clinical and Behavioral Spectrum.

Authors:  Anikó Ujfalusi; Orsolya Nagy; Beáta Bessenyei; Györgyi Lente; Irén Kántor; Ádám J Borbély; Katalin Szakszon
Journal:  Mol Syndromol       Date:  2020-04-04

2.  The use of array-CGH in a cohort of Greek children with developmental delay.

Authors:  Emmanouil Manolakos; Annalisa Vetro; Konstantinos Kefalas; Stamatia-Maria Rapti; Eirini Louizou; Antonios Garas; George Kitsos; Lefteris Vasileiadis; Panagiota Tsoplou; Makarios Eleftheriades; Panagiotis Peitsidis; Sandro Orru; Thomas Liehr; Michael B Petersen; Loretta Thomaidis
Journal:  Mol Cytogenet       Date:  2010-11-09       Impact factor: 2.009

3.  A Rare Case of Dysmorphism with Duplication in Chromosome 22.

Authors:  Mln Deepika; Sunitha Tella; Srilekha Avvari; Nallari Pratibha; Venkateshwari Ananthapur
Journal:  Indian J Clin Biochem       Date:  2021-01-20

4.  Submicroscopic subtelomeric aberrations in Chinese patients with unexplained developmental delay/mental retardation.

Authors:  Ye Wu; Taoyun Ji; Jingmin Wang; Jing Xiao; Huifang Wang; Jie Li; Zhijie Gao; Yanling Yang; Bin Cai; Liwen Wang; Zhongshu Zhou; Lili Tian; Xiaozhu Wang; Nan Zhong; Jiong Qin; Xiru Wu; Yuwu Jiang
Journal:  BMC Med Genet       Date:  2010-05-11       Impact factor: 2.103

  4 in total

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