4.7 Article

Diminutive somatic deletions in the 5q region lead to a phenotype atypical of classical 5q-syndrome

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BLOOD
卷 122, 期 14, 页码 2487-2490

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AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2013-06-509935

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资金

  1. Diamond Blackfan Anemia Foundation
  2. Pediatric Cancer Foundation
  3. Arkansas Biosciences Institute
  4. Feinstein Institute for Medical Research General Clinical Research Center [M01 RR018535]
  5. Centers for Disease Control-sponsored Diamond Blackfan Anemia Surveillance and Awareness Program
  6. National Institutes of Health [R01-HL079571, R01-HL107558, R109-MOHLKE, K02-HL111156, K08-HL092224]
  7. National Human Genome Research Institute Intramural funds
  8. St. Baldrick's Foundation Scholar Career Development Award
  9. St. Baldrick's Consortium on Pediatric Myelodysplastic Syndrome

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Classical 5q- syndrome is an acquired macrocytic anemia of the elderly. Similar to Diamond Blackfan anemia (DBA), an inherited red cell aplasia, the bone marrow is characterized by a paucity of erythroid precursors. RPS14 deletions in combination with other deletions in the region have been implicated as causative of the 5q- syndrome phenotype. We asked whether smaller, less easily detectable deletions could account for a syndrome with a modified phenotype. We employed single-nucleotide polymorphism array genotyping to identify small deletions in patients diagnosed with DBA and other anemias lacking molecular diagnoses. Diminutive mosaic deletions involving RPS14 were identified in a 5-year-old patient with nonclassical DBA and in a 17-year-old patient with myelodysplastic syndrome. Patients with nonclassical DBA and other hypoproliferative anemias may have somatically acquired 5q deletions with RPS14 haploinsufficiency not identified by fluorescence in situ hybridization or cytogenetic testing, thus refining the spectrum of disorders with 5q- deletions.

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