Partial trisomy 1q is rare and mostly the result of an abnormal segregation of parental translocation chromosomes and their homologues. Only 31 cases have been described with pure partial trisomy 1q. In the fetus presented, chromosome analysis after amniocentesis had shown an unbalanced male karyotype with an aberrant chromosome 1. A de novo terminal duplication of the long arm was suspected but could not be verified by FISH in 1994. Five years after fetal death, retrospective identification of the additional material in 1q could finally be achieved by comparative genomic hybridization (CGH) using DNA extracted from formalin-fixed and paraffin-embedded fetal tissues. A direct duplication dir dup (1)(pter→q44::q32.1→qter) was found. Only 6 other individuals with duplication of this segment have been described so far. Comparative delineation of a dup1q phenotype with regard to size and origin of the dup (1q) segment evidenced that large duplications as well as proximal and interstitial duplications coincide with more severe visceral malformations, severe mental retar- dation and a short life span. Terminal duplications (1q32→qter) concur with less severe malformations and longer periods of survival, but marked mental retardation. With small terminal duplications (1q42→qter) dysmorphisms are usually mild and intellectual performance is mostly in the normal range.
Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is an autosomal dominantly inherited neuromuscular disorder affecting facial and shoulder girdle muscles with subsequent progression to the pelvic girdle and lower extremities. The major gene involved has been localized to chromosome 4q35 (FSHD1A). The 4q35 DNA marker p13E-11 (D4F104S1) detects a de novo EcoRI DNA rearrangement of < 30 kb in isolated and familial cases. The intrafamilial size of the fragment is constant, inversely correlated with the severity, and directly correlated with the age of onset of the condition. There has been evidence of parental mosaicism in FSHD1A for the D4F104S1 locus. Four female and three male clinically unaffected parents have been described to be carriers of EcoRI fragments of the same size as their affected offspring, but with a markedly less intensive hybridization signal (semi-quantitative evidence). In our total sample of 42 FSHD1A families, we found semi-quantitative evidence of parental D4F104S1 mosaicism in 11 families (EcoRI fragment size range: 12-27 kb). On analysis with adjacent 4q35 probes (D4S163, D4S139), additional qualitative evidence of germline mosaicism could be obtained in two families. In our mosaic families and in the families reported in the literature, a female predominance of mosaicism carriers (13 females versus 5 males) could be noted. In our sample, mosaicism was observed in multigeneration families, in families with isolated cases, and in families with two and three affected children from seemingly unaffected parents. A short EcoRI fragment once having emerged in a mosaicism carrier was found to be transmitted autosomal dominantly to subsequent generations. Of all reported sporadic patients, 19% have a mosaic parent. Finding evidence of parental mosaicism in all our families with more than one affected child of seemingly unaffected parents suggests that there is no autosomal recessively inherited form of FSHD1A.
Probe p13E-11 (locus D4F104S1) detects two highly homologous polymorphic loci on chromosomes 4q35 and 10q26. Previous reports in the literature have described a correlation of shortened 4q35-specific fragments and facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD1). We have identified 30 FSHDI families (46 patients) carrying one short 4q35 and one short 10q26 fragment. The clinical data of these patients were compared with those of 47 families (131 patients) showing a single short 4q35 fragment, in order to evaluate a potentially modifying influence of shortened 10q26 fragments on the phenotype. According to our results, the polymorphic locus on 10q26 does not modify the FSHDI phenotype. The normal population (14%) and our FSHDI population (13%) did not significantly differ in the overall frequency of short polymorphic 10q26 fragments. The specificity of the p13E-11/EcoRI-BlnI test for FSHD1 was 100%.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.