3.8 Article

FISH analysis for apparently simple terminal deletions of the X chromosome: Identification of hidden structural abnormalities

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL GENETICS
Volume 104, Issue 4, Pages 307-311

Publisher

WILEY-LISS
DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.10071

Keywords

FISH; structural analysis; X chromosome; clinical application

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We report on fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis in 30 mosaic or nonmosaic females diagnosed as having apparently simple terminal X deletions by standard G-banding analysis. FISH studies for DXZ1, the Xp and Xq telomere regions, and the whole X chromosome painting were carried out for the 30 females, indicating rearranged X chromosomes with signal patterns discordant with terminal deletions in 6 cases: one dic(X)(DXZ1++) chromosome, two der(X)(qtel++) chromosomes, one Xq(qtel+) chromosome, and two der(X)(ptel++) chromosomes. Additional FISH studies were performed for the 6 cases using probes defining 12 loci on the X chromosome, showing large Xp deletion and small Xp duplication in the dic(X)(DXZ1++) chromosome, partial Xp deletions and partial Xq duplications in the two der(X)(qtel++) chromosomes, an interstitial Xq deletion in the Xq- (qtel+) chromosome, and partial Xq deletions and partial Xp duplications in the two der(X) (ptel++) chromosomes. Clinical assessment of the 6 cases revealed tall and normal stature in the two mosaic cases with the der(X)(ptel++) chromosomes that were shown to be associated with SHOX duplication. The results suggest that unusual X chromosome rearrangements are often misinterpreted as simple terminal X deletions, and that FISH analysis is useful for precise structural determination and better genotype-phenotype correlation of the X chromosome aberrations. (C) 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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