| Literature DB >> 26807150 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Copy number variations (CNVs) having no (obvious) clinical effects were rediscovered as major part of human genome in 2004. However, for every cytogeneticist microscopically visible harmless CNVs (CG-CNVs) are well known since decades. Harmless CG-CNVs can be present as heterochromatic or even as euchromatic variants in clinically healthy persons.Entities:
Keywords: Banding cytogenetics; Copy number variations (CNVs); Euchromatic variants (EVs); Heteromorphism; Molecular cytogenetics
Year: 2016 PMID: 26807150 PMCID: PMC4724132 DOI: 10.1186/s13039-016-0216-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cytogenet ISSN: 1755-8166 Impact factor: 2.009
Fig. 1Heterochromatic regions (CG-CNVs) and euchromatic variants (EVs). CG-CNVs and EVs of the human genome are highlighted in a schematically depicted haploid set of human chromosomes
Fig. 3Eight examples of CG-CNVs. Here examples of CG-CNVs are presented as characterized by molecular cytogenetic based hybridization done using probes and protocols as previously reported [15]. All eight studied persons were clinically normal and studied cytogenetically either prenatally, due to infertility or it was a parental analysis due to a clinically affected child. In each part of the figure the studied chromosome pair is indicated at top, the ‘abnormal’ chromosome is shown below the corresponding ‘normal’ homologue and the probes used are indicated right-side of the depicted chromosome. Each chromosome is shown twice: left side just in inverted DAPI-banding and right side fluorescence signals of applied probes on these chromosomes. a) A chromosomal enlargement of a short arm of a chromosome 15 was identified as a der(15)(pter- > p11.2::p12- > qter), i.e. an intrachromosomal direct duplication was observed. b) The enlarged short arm of a chromosome 21 showed an amplification of NOR-sequences, which can be described according to [15] as der(21)(p12amp). c) Similar as in Fig. 3a here a chromosome 22 showed an intrachromosomal direct duplication, however including even parts of cytoband 22q11.21, with a partial karyotype dic(22)(pter- > q11.21::p11.2- > qter). d) The result in this case with a strong signal of D22Z4 in 22p11.2 in one and an extremely weak signal of the same probe on the other chromosome 22 was interpreted as a t(22;22)(p11.2;p11.2). e) For chromosome 3 DAPI-banding is known to reveal multiple chromosomal heteromorphisms [15]. In this case here chromosome 3 depicted below showed even a conspicuous GTG-banding pattern (not shown). After application of the available pericentromeric probes for chromosome 3 it was obvious that none of the regions covered by those probes was involved in this alteration; still DAPI banding pattern was different and enlarged. Thus the conclusion was that a duplication of satellite I or III DNA reported for that region [15] must be amplified and thus the partial karyotype is: dup(3)(q11.2q11.2). f) In this case also GTG-banding already showed an aberrant pattern in the pericentric region of a chromosome 3 (not shown). However, here the probe D3Z1 showed two signal on the derivative chromosome 3. Together with the inverted DAPI-banding pattern an inv(3)(q11.1q11.2) was suggested. g) A similar pattern as for the derivative chromosome 3 from Fig. 3f was seen here for a chromosome 5 after applying the alphoid probe D5Z2 (identical to D1Z1 and D19Z3). Still, as D5Z2 is located in 5p11.1 only and an enlargement of DAPI-positive region in 5q was visible a der(5)(pter-> q11.1::p11.1- > p11.1:q11.1- > qter) was reported. h) On the chromosome 8 below an altered distal part of the short arm is visible. The probe RP11-122 N11 is specific for the known EV in this region; as is gives a significantly stronger signal on the derivative than on the normal chromosome 8 this prenatal case was considered to carry the known EV without clinical consequences. Later-on a healthy child was born
Fig. 2‘Normal sizes’ of heterochromatic regions within the human genome. a) Acrocentric short arms are normal size if they have a length between half of 18p and 2/3 of 17p; three different variants all considered as ‘normal’ are depicted for chromosome 14 in the center part of this figure. An example each, for a 14p- and a 14p + are shown left right of these three normal chromosome 14 variants. b) For 9q12 three normal sized variants are shown here as before for 14p in figure-part A. Normal sized is for 9p12 if it is between half size of 16p and full 16p. 9qh- and 9qh + are shown as well correspondingly smaller than half of 16p or larger than whole 16p. c) For centromeric size the reference size may be the diameter of a chromatide of the same metaphase or stained chromosome. Cen- and cen + heteromorphisms are clearly smaller or larger than a chromatide diameter, respectively
Frequency of CG-CNVs in general human population
| Kind of aberration | Frequency [%] |
|---|---|
| inv(9)(p11q13) | 2.86 |
| acrocentric p+ | 2.38 |
| Yqh+ | 0.78 |
| 16qh+ | 0.37 |
| 9qh+ | 0.33 |
| 1qh+ | 0.25 |
| acrocentric p- | 0.11 |
| inv(2)(p11.2q13) | 0.11 |
| Yqh- | 0.09 |
The data was adapted from [15]