| Literature DB >> 24472397 |
Francesca Novara1, Alessandro Simonati, Federico Sicca, Roberta Battini, Simona Fiori, Annarita Contaldo, Lucia Criscuolo, Orsetta Zuffardi, Roberto Ciccone.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Xq28 duplications, including MECP2 (methyl CpG-binding protein 2; OMIM 300005), have been identified in approximately 140 male patients presenting with hypotonia, severe developmental delay/intellectual disability, limited or absent speech and ambulation, and recurrent respiratory infections. Female patients with Xq28 duplication have been rarely reported and are usually asymptomatic. Altogether, only fifteen symptomatic females with Xq28 duplications including MECP2 have been reported so far: six of them had interstitial duplications while the remaining had a duplication due to an unbalanced X;autosome translocation. Some of these females present with unspecific mild to moderate intellectual disability whereas a more complex phenotype is reported for females with unbalanced X;autosome translocations.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24472397 PMCID: PMC3922903 DOI: 10.1186/1755-8166-7-10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cytogenet ISSN: 1755-8166 Impact factor: 2.009
A summary of genetic and clinical features of symptomatic female patients with duplication reported so far in literature and including the three cases reported herein (Group A: patients with small interstitial Xq28 duplication, Group B: Xq28 duplication due to X;autosome translocations)
| Age | | 7-21 years | 18 months-19 years |
| Genetic features | | | |
| Duplicate segment length | | 107.5 Kb-700 Kb | 0.29 Kb-16.6 Mb (for two cases the size is unknown but cytogenetic visible) |
| Inheritance | 4 | 8 | |
| | Maternal | 5 | 0 |
| | Unknown | 0 | 1 |
| XCI | Random | 6 | 2 |
| | Skewed | 3 | 1 |
| | Unknown | 0 | 6 |
| Clinical features | | | |
| Abnormal general conditions | | 5/9 (55%) | 9/9 (100%) |
| Dysmorphic patterns | | 3/9 (33%) | 9/9 (100%) |
| Delayed motor development | | 4/9 (44%) | 9/9 (100%) |
| Abnormal language development | | 6/9 (67%) | 9/9 (100%) |
| Intellectual disability | | 7/9 (78%) | 9/9 (100%) |
| Mood and behaviour | Affected | 4/9 (44%) | 1/9 (11%) |
| | Unknown | 5/9 (55%) | 8/9 (88%) |
| Social conduct | Affected | 8/9 (88%) | 0/9 (0%) |
| | Unknown | 1/9(11%) | 9/9 (100%) |
| Autistic features | | 4/9 (44%) | 0/9 (0%) |
| Seizures | | 1/8 (13%) | 3/9 (33%) |
| Brain MRI | Abnormal | 0/9 (0%) | 3/9 (33%) |
| Unknown | 1/9 (11%) | 6/9 (67%) |
Abnormal general conditions: growth retardation, constipation, hypotonia and/or joint laxity.
Dysmorphic pattern: microcephaly, trigonocephaly, facial dysmorphisms, multiple skeletal and/or organs dysmorphisms.
Language development: either delayed or impaired during school-age and adolescence.
Intellectual disability: Group A: either mild or moderate; Group B: severe only.
Brain-MRI: cortical atrophy along with white matter involvement.
Figure 1Pedigree of the three families with clinical details for carriers and patients. The male who died at 23 years of age in family 2 has been previous published (family 10) in Clayton-Smith et al., 2009 [9]. The healthy male in family 2 died at the age of 7 years old because of an accident.
Major clinical findings for all three reported patients
| | - two spontaneous abortions | - male twin: facial dysmorphism severe early delay; death at 18 months of age | |
| | - one maternal uncle with ID | - one brother: facial dysmorphism severe developmental delay, seizures, autistic features, death at 23 years of age | |
| (at birth) | | | |
| GW | 40 | 39 | 40 |
| L (cm) | 49 (50 pc) | Not known | 51 (50 pc) |
| BW (g) | 2400 (10 pc) | 3000 (50 pc) | 3780 (75 pc) |
| HC (cm) | 36 (50 pc) | Not known35 | (50 pc) |
| Walking (months) | 18 | 13 | 15 |
| Speech onset (years) | 5 (few words) → 12 (fair) | 4 | 3 |
| Behaviour | Difficulty of separation and isolation | Hyperactivity | Tantrum |
| Neurological condition | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Learning | Difficulties | Difficulties | Difficulties |
| Intelligence | Moderate (IQ 41) | Borderline (IQ NA) | Borderline (IQ 80 when 6 years) |
| Communication/social conduct | Difficulties | Good | Difficulties (since 3 years) |
| Behaviour | Quiet and withdrawn | Hyperactivity, attention deficit, impulsiveness | Hyperactivity |
| Neurological condition | | | |
| Motor coordination | Fair | Poor | Fair |
| Hypotonia/joint laxity | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Intelligence | Scarce (IQ NA) | Borderline (IQ 84 when15 years) | Mild (IQ 57 when17 years) |
| Communication/social conduct | Difficulties | Difficulties | Difficulties |
| Behaviour | Quiet and meek | Hyperactive, anxious, mood disorder | Anxious, depressive mood |
| Minor facial dymorphisms (broad nasal bridge, prognatism, mild ocular hypertelorism) | Minor facial dysmorphisms (broad nasal bridge, prognatism) | None | |
| EEG | Normal | NA | Posterior slow waves |
| MRI | Normal | NA | Normal |
GW: gestational age; L: length; BW: body weight; HC: head circumference; IQ: intelligence quotient (ascertained according to WISC-R scale); ID: intellectual disability; NA: not ascertained.
Figure 2Pictures of case 1 when she was 14-years-old (A and B) and case 2 at 21 years of age (C and D).
Figure 3Schematic representation of Xq28 region. All nine female patients with intrachromosomal Xq28 duplication are represented. Familiar cases are in black, while de novo duplications in grey. Gene content of the region is shown from the UCSC Genome Browser version Human February 2009 (hg19).