| Literature DB >> 25853300 |
Julián Nevado1,2, Jill A Rosenfeld3, Rocío Mena1, María Palomares-Bralo1,2, Elena Vallespín1,2, María Ángeles Mori1,2, Jair A Tenorio1, Karen W Gripp4, Elizabeth Denenberg4, Miguel Del Campo5, Alberto Plaja5, Rubén Martín-Arenas1, Fernando Santos-Simarro6, Lluis Armengol7, Gordon Gowans8, María Orera9, M Carmen Sanchez-Hombre9, Esther Corbacho-Fernández9, Alberto Fernández-Jaén10, Chad Haldeman-Englert11, Sulagna Saitta12, Holly Dubbs13, Duban B Bénédicte14, Xia Li15, Lani Devaney16, Mary Beth Dinulos17, Stephanie Vallee17, M Carmen Crespo1, Blanca Fernández18, Victoria E Fernández-Montaño1, Inmaculada Rueda-Arenas1, María Luisa de Torres2,18, Jay W Ellison19, Salmo Raskin20, Carlos A Venegas-Vega21,22, Fernando Fernández-Ramírez21, Alicia Delicado2,18, Sixto García-Miñaúr2,6, Pablo Lapunzina2,6.
Abstract
Array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) is a powerful genetic tool that has enabled the identification of novel imbalances in individuals with intellectual disability (ID), autistic disorders and congenital malformations. Here we report a 'genotype first' approach using aCGH on 13 unrelated patients with 19p13.3 submicroscopic rearrangement (11 deletions and 2 duplications) and review cases in the literature and in public databases. Shared phenotypic features suggest that these patients represent an interstitial microdeletion/microduplication syndrome at 19p13.3. Common features consist of abnormal head circumference in most patients (macrocephaly with the deletions and microcephaly with the duplications), ID with developmental delay (DD), hypotonia, speech delay and common dysmorphic features. The phenotype is associated with at least a ~0.113 Mb critical region harboring three strong candidate genes probably associated with DD, ID, speech delay and other dysmorphic features: MAP2K2, ZBTB7A and PIAS4, an E3 ubiquitin ligase involved in the ubiquitin signaling pathways, which we hypothesize for the first time to be associated with head size in humans.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25853300 PMCID: PMC4795197 DOI: 10.1038/ejhg.2015.51
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Hum Genet ISSN: 1018-4813 Impact factor: 4.246