The main features of trisomy 9 syndrome in mosaic and non-mosaic forms have been thoroughly described. Characteristic traits are low-set malformed ears, micrognathia, broad nose with bulbous tip, abnormal brain, congenital heart defects, abnormal hands and feet, genital abnormalities, and early death. We report a case of mosaic trisomy 9 with holoprosencephaly (HPE). The propositi was born at 37 weeks, with intra-uterine growth retardation, hypotelorism and single nostril, ventricular septal defect, anterior placement of anus, clenched hands with thumb adduction and ulnar deviation. Facial anomalies characteristic of trisomy 9 included deeply set eyes and short palpebral fissures, flat face with maxillary hypoplasia, small mouth, and low-set posteriorly angulated ears. Cytogenetic analysis showed mosaic trisomy 9 with 17% trisomic cells. Pathology confirmed lobar HPE. In literature, isolated arrhinia, related to the HPE spectrum, was reported in one case of mosaic trisomy 9. Our case raises the question of the causative role of trisomy 9 in full blown HPE.
We report a girl with mild mental retardation with onset of infantile spasms at age of 9 months. Treatment with a short course of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) was successful. Initially, a diagnosis of idiopathic West syndrome, with good neurological outcome and disappearance of epilepsy after treatment, was made. Conventional karyotype was normal. Reinvestigations were done at age 8 years, because of a new pregnancy. Karyotyping of both parents was done because of mild dysmorphic features in the proband, and to eliminate other causes than early age epilepsy as the etiology of her mental retardation. Parental karyotypes showed a balanced paternal translocation (4p;17q) resulting in partial 4p trisomy, without significant 17q monosomy in the proband. Chromosomal abnormalities usually lead to a severe West syndrome with poor prognosis of neurological outcome (persistent severe epilepsy, mental retardation, and behavioral disturbances). The presence of an undetected cytogenetic anomaly in our proband with transient hypsarythmia is unusual and led us to propose systematic telomeric screening in apparently "idiopathic" West syndrome patients with mild mental retardation and subtle dysmorphic features.
In cystic hygroma (CH) fetuses, hydrops fetalis and anamnios make it difficult or impossible to obtain amniotic fluid or cord blood for cytogenetic analysis. We report six cases of CH in which cytogenetic analysis was simply and successfully performed using nuchal fluid cells. The karyotypes were 47,XY, + 18,46,XY,46,XX, and 45,X (n = 3).
Alagille syndrome (AGS) is a well-defined genetic entity assigned to the short arm of Chromosome (Chr) 20 by a series of observations of AGS patients associated with microdeletions in this region. By fusing lymphoblastoid cells of an AGS patient that exhibited a microdeletion in the short arm of Chr 20 encompassing bands p11.23 to p12.3 with rodent thermosensitive mutant cells (CHOtsH1-1) deficient in-leucyl-tRNA synthetase, we isolated a somatic cell hybrid segregating the deleted human Chr 20. This hybrid clone, designated NR2, was characterized by several methods, including PCR, with eight pairs of oligonucleotides mapped to Chr 20: D20S5, D20S41, D20S42, D20S56, D20S57, D20S58, adenosine deaminase (ADA), and Prion protein (PRIP); Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (RFLP) analyses with four genomic anonymous probes (D20S5, cD3H12, D20S17, D20S18); and fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) with total human DNA and D20Z1, a sequence specific to the human Chr 20 centromere, as probes. The NR2 hybrid allowed us to exclude three candidate genes for AGS: hepatic nuclear factor 3 beta (HNF3 beta), paired box 1 (PAX1), and cystatin C (CST3) as shown by their localization outside of the deletion. The NR2 hybrid is a powerful tool for the mapping of new probes of this region, as well as for obtaining new informative probes specific for the deletion by subtractive cloning of the region. Such markers will be useful for linkage analysis and screening of cDNA libraries.
The aim of this study was to test whether there is an excess of dementia of Alzheimer type (DAT) cases in Down syndrome (DS) relatives. We conducted a case-control study in families of DS children with classical trisomy 21. A control group was constituted of families of children referred to the same hospital for benign diseases. Families of 188 DS children and 185 controls were recruited. We obtained vital statistics on 1,850 (response rate 82%) grandparents and great-grandparents in the DS group and 1,525 (69%) in the control group. Rates of possible severe dementia were calculated on ancestors over age 60 years with available data on mental function, 1,336 in the DS group and 1,113 in the control group. Rates of possible severe dementia were similar in the two groups: 5.6% (78 cases) in DS and 6.2% (66 cases) in control. Dementia with insidious onset suggestive of DAT was observed in 2% (28 cases) of DS ancestors and 2.6% (28 cases) of control ancestors. Our results argue against an excess of dementia cases with insidious onset suggestive of DAT in families of children with classical trisomy 21.
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