BACKGROUND: Deletions of chromosome 19 have rarely been reported, with the exception of some patients with deletion 19q13.2 and Blackfan-Diamond syndrome due to haploinsufficiency of the RPS19 gene. Such a paucity of patients might be due to the difficulty in detecting a small rearrangement on this chromosome that lacks a distinct banding pattern. Array comparative genomic hybridisation (CGH) has become a powerful tool for the detection of microdeletions and microduplications at high resolution in patients with syndromic mental retardation. METHODS AND RESULTS: Using array CGH, this study identified three interstitial overlapping 19q13.11 deletions, defining a minimal critical region of 2.87 Mb, associated with a clinically recognisable syndrome. The three patients share several major features including: pre- and postnatal growth retardation with slender habitus, severe postnatal feeding difficulties, microcephaly, hypospadias, signs of ectodermal dysplasia, and cutis aplasia over the posterior occiput. Interestingly, these clinical features have also been described in a previously reported patient with a 19q12q13.1 deletion. No recurrent breakpoints were identified in our patients, suggesting that no-allelic homologous recombination mechanism is not involved in these rearrangements. CONCLUSIONS: Based on these results, the authors suggest that this chromosomal abnormality may represent a novel clinically recognisable microdeletion syndrome caused by haploinsufficiency of dosage sensitive genes in the 19q13.11 region.
BACKGROUND: Deletions of chromosome 19 have rarely been reported, with the exception of some patients with deletion 19q13.2 and Blackfan-Diamond syndrome due to haploinsufficiency of the RPS19 gene. Such a paucity of patients might be due to the difficulty in detecting a small rearrangement on this chromosome that lacks a distinct banding pattern. Array comparative genomic hybridisation (CGH) has become a powerful tool for the detection of microdeletions and microduplications at high resolution in patients with syndromic mental retardation. METHODS AND RESULTS: Using array CGH, this study identified three interstitial overlapping 19q13.11 deletions, defining a minimal critical region of 2.87 Mb, associated with a clinically recognisable syndrome. The three patients share several major features including: pre- and postnatal growth retardation with slender habitus, severe postnatal feeding difficulties, microcephaly, hypospadias, signs of ectodermal dysplasia, and cutis aplasia over the posterior occiput. Interestingly, these clinical features have also been described in a previously reported patient with a 19q12q13.1 deletion. No recurrent breakpoints were identified in our patients, suggesting that no-allelic homologous recombination mechanism is not involved in these rearrangements. CONCLUSIONS: Based on these results, the authors suggest that this chromosomal abnormality may represent a novel clinically recognisable microdeletion syndrome caused by haploinsufficiency of dosage sensitive genes in the 19q13.11 region.
Authors: Jill E Urquhart; Simon G Williams; Sanjeev S Bhaskar; Naomi Bowers; Jill Clayton-Smith; William G Newman Journal: J Hum Genet Date: 2015-09-17 Impact factor: 3.172
Authors: Julián Nevado; Jill A Rosenfeld; Rocío Mena; María Palomares-Bralo; Elena Vallespín; María Ángeles Mori; Jair A Tenorio; Karen W Gripp; Elizabeth Denenberg; Miguel Del Campo; Alberto Plaja; Rubén Martín-Arenas; Fernando Santos-Simarro; Lluis Armengol; Gordon Gowans; María Orera; M Carmen Sanchez-Hombre; Esther Corbacho-Fernández; Alberto Fernández-Jaén; Chad Haldeman-Englert; Sulagna Saitta; Holly Dubbs; Duban B Bénédicte; Xia Li; Lani Devaney; Mary Beth Dinulos; Stephanie Vallee; M Carmen Crespo; Blanca Fernández; Victoria E Fernández-Montaño; Inmaculada Rueda-Arenas; María Luisa de Torres; Jay W Ellison; Salmo Raskin; Carlos A Venegas-Vega; Fernando Fernández-Ramírez; Alicia Delicado; Sixto García-Miñaúr; Pablo Lapunzina Journal: Eur J Hum Genet Date: 2015-04-08 Impact factor: 4.246
Authors: Michael Zech; Sylvia Boesch; Esther M Maier; Ingo Borggraefe; Katharina Vill; Franco Laccone; Veronika Pilshofer; Andres Ceballos-Baumann; Bader Alhaddad; Riccardo Berutti; Werner Poewe; Tobias B Haack; Bernhard Haslinger; Tim M Strom; Juliane Winkelmann Journal: Am J Hum Genet Date: 2016-11-10 Impact factor: 11.025
Authors: Ganesh J Swaminathan; Eugene Bragin; Eleni A Chatzimichali; Manuel Corpas; A Paul Bevan; Caroline F Wright; Nigel P Carter; Matthew E Hurles; Helen V Firth Journal: Hum Mol Genet Date: 2012-09-08 Impact factor: 6.150
Authors: Helen V Firth; Shola M Richards; A Paul Bevan; Stephen Clayton; Manuel Corpas; Diana Rajan; Steven Van Vooren; Yves Moreau; Roger M Pettett; Nigel P Carter Journal: Am J Hum Genet Date: 2009-04-02 Impact factor: 11.025
Authors: Ivan Y Iourov; Svetlana G Vorsanova; Oxana S Kurinnaia; Maria A Zelenova; Alexandra P Silvanovich; Yuri B Yurov Journal: Mol Cytogenet Date: 2012-12-31 Impact factor: 2.009