Literature DB >> 21850686

Extending the scope of diagnostic chromosome analysis: detection of single gene defects using high-resolution SNP microarrays.

Damien L Bruno1, Zornitza Stark, David J Amor, Trent Burgess, Kathy Butler, Sylvea Corrie, David Francis, Devika Ganesamoorthy, Louise Hills, Paul A James, Darren O'Rielly, Ralph Oertel, Ravi Savarirayan, Krishnamurthy Prabhakara, Nicholas Salce, Howard R Slater.   

Abstract

Microarray analysis has provided significant advances in the diagnosis of conditions resulting from submicroscopic chromosome abnormalities. It has been recommended that array testing should be a "first tier" test in the evaluation of individuals with intellectual disability, developmental delay, congenital anomalies, and autism. The availability of arrays with increasingly high probe coverage and resolution has increased the detection of decreasingly small copy number changes (CNCs) down to the intragenic or even exon level. Importantly, arrays that genotype SNPs also detect extended regions of homozygosity. We describe 14 examples of single gene disorders caused by intragenic changes from a consecutive set of 6,500 tests using high-resolution SNP microarrays. These cases illustrate the increased scope of cytogenetic testing beyond dominant chromosome rearrangements that typically contain many genes. Nine of the cases confirmed the clinical diagnosis, that is, followed a "phenotype to genotype" approach. Five were diagnosed by the laboratory analysis in the absence of a specific clinical diagnosis, that is, followed a "genotype to phenotype" approach. Two were clinically significant, incidental findings. The importance of astute clinical assessment and laboratory-clinician consultation is emphasized to optimize the value of microarrays in the diagnosis of disorders caused by single gene copy number and sequence mutations.
© 2011 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21850686     DOI: 10.1002/humu.21581

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Mutat        ISSN: 1059-7794            Impact factor:   4.878


  20 in total

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Journal:  Neurogenetics       Date:  2013-09-27       Impact factor: 2.660

3.  Secondary variants--in defense of a more fitting term in the incidental findings debate.

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Review 5.  Chromosomal Microarrays: Understanding Genetics of Neurodevelopmental Disorders and Congenital Anomalies.

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Authors:  Mohamed S Abdel-Hamid; Mahmoud Y Issa; Hasnaa M Elbendary; Sherif F Abdel-Ghafar; Karima Rafaat; Heba Hosny; Marian Girgis; Ghada M H Abdel-Salam; Maha S Zaki
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8.  Goldberg-Shprintzen Syndrome Associated with a Novel Variant in the KIFBP Gene.

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9.  Non-invasive prenatal diagnosis using fetal DNA in maternal plasma: a preliminary study for identification of paternally-inherited alleles using single nucleotide polymorphisms.

Authors:  J J Chen; J A M A Tan; K H Chua; P C Tan; E George
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10.  So rare we need to hunt for them: reframing the ethical debate on incidental findings.

Authors:  Sebastian Schuol; Christoph Schickhardt; Stefan Wiemann; Claus R Bartram; Klaus Tanner; Roland Eils; Benjamin Meder; Daniela Richter; Hanno Glimm; Christof von Kalle; Eva C Winkler
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