To investigate X chromosome inactivation (XCI) patterns in 45,X/46,XX mosaics, genomic DNA was extracted from peripheral blood samples of 15 female subjects who showed different proportions of 45,X cell clones. XCI patterns were analyzed using two assays. The first assay was the BstXI restriction endonuclease detection of an Xlinked phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) gene polymorphism following digestion of the DNA with methylation-sensitive HpaII, or with methylation-insensitive AfaI as a control. The second assay was the detection of a CAG triplet repeat polymorphism in the X-linked androgen receptor (AR) gene after sodium bisulfite treatment. Of the 15 subjects, 11 were informative due to heterozygosity for at least one of the polymorphisms (6 were heterozygous for the PGK polymorphism and 9 were heterozygous for the AR polymorphism). Four of the 11 informative subjects (36%) showed extremely skewed XCI for at least one of the polymorphisms, which was a much higher incidence than previously reported for normal females. Moreover, 3 of these 4 women had proportions of 45,X cell clones greater than 20%. Although our results may be due to several possible cytogenetic or molecular mechanisms, the most likely explanation is that cases of 45,X/46,XX that contain relatively high levels of 45,X cell clones probably arose due to structural aberrations of the X chromosome undetectable by conventional karyotyping.
Summary. We report a 13-year-old girl with Down's syndrome (DS) having a mosaic karyotype of 46,XX/46,XX, ¹21,þi(21q), who developed acute myelogenous leukaemia (AML) (FAB M1). The t(8;21) translocation generating a AML1/MTG8 chimaeric gene of her blasts was demonstrated by cytogenetic analysis and reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction. Interestingly, the leukaemic clone with t (8;21) did not have isochromosome 21q, indicating that the blasts were of normal cell origin. These findings suggest that, in older patients with DS, 21 trisomy cells have no greater predisposition to develop AML than normal karyotypic cells.
A 28‐year‐old woman who complained of irregular menstruation was diagnosed as suffering from trisomy 18 mosaicism. She was karyotyped because of her characteristic face, mild mental retardation and aberrant hyperpigmentation of the skin. Her motor function was within normal range. Physical and laboratory examinations, however, revealed obesity, short stature, minor anomalies of the fingers, many areas of hyperpigmentation on the trunk and the hips, hypergonadotropinemia, diabetes mellitus, liver dysfunction, and hyperlipidemia. The ratios of normal/trisomy 18 were 4:135 in blood lymphocytes, 3:11 in a hyperpigmented area of the skin, 20:0 in a normally pigmented area of the skin, and 14:6 in ascitic cells. Laparoscopy revealed that her ovaries contained neither follicles nor germ cells.
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