2002
DOI: 10.1034/j.1399-0004.2002.620511.x
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Ring syndrome caused by ring chromosome 7 without loss of subtelomeric sequences

Abstract: Ring chromosome 7 is an unusual chromosome anomaly. Here we describe a patient with ring chromosome 7 and we show that both subtelomeres are still present. The diagnosis agrees with 'ring syndrome'. This report helps to further delineate the clinical manifestations of 'ring syndrome' and to distinguish the phenotypic consequences of the presence of a ring chromosome 7 from the phenotypic consequences of terminal chromosome 7 submicroscopic deletions.

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Cited by 34 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…The syndrome could also include severe growth retardation and would be due to mitotic instability of cells carrying the aberration, with subsequent loss of the ring leading to cell death [Kosztolá nyi, 1987;Wintle et al, 1995]. However, not all ring chromosomes are associated with seizures [Vermeesch et al, 2002;Ishmael et al, 2003]. Thus, selected ring chromosome abnormalities can provide important clues in the mapping of genes involved in this disorder [Singh et al, 2002].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…The syndrome could also include severe growth retardation and would be due to mitotic instability of cells carrying the aberration, with subsequent loss of the ring leading to cell death [Kosztolá nyi, 1987;Wintle et al, 1995]. However, not all ring chromosomes are associated with seizures [Vermeesch et al, 2002;Ishmael et al, 2003]. Thus, selected ring chromosome abnormalities can provide important clues in the mapping of genes involved in this disorder [Singh et al, 2002].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…This event typically results in partial monosomy for the distal ends of the short and long arms of a chromosome and often results in mental retardation and malformations (Kosztolanyi 1987). However, rare telomere-telomere fusions generating a ring chromosome may result in no loss of euchromatin with variable phenotypic effect (Pezzolo et al 1993;Vermeesch et al 2002). Formation of rings is uncommon and has been reported for all chromosomes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Alternatively, they can be formed by subtelomeric sequence fusion or telomere-telomere fusion with no loss of genetic material, resulting in complete ring chromosomes (Henegariu et al, 1997;Sigurdardottir et al, 1999;Vermeesch et al, 2002;Le Caigne et al, 2004). Based on high-resolution molecular karyotyping, other mechanisms of the formation of ring chromosomes have been proposed, such as rings originating from an inverted duplication with a terminal deletion rearrangement (Knijnenburg et al, 2007;Rossi et al, 2008a).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%