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Early detection of Angelman syndrome resulting from de novo paternal isodisomic 15q UPD and review of comparable cases

BACKGROUND: Angelman syndrome is a rare neurogenetic disorder that results in intellectual and developmental disturbances, seizures, jerky movements and frequent smiling. Angelman syndrome is caused by two genetic disturbances: either genes on the maternally inherited chromosome 15 are deleted or in...

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Autores principales: Horváth, Emese, Horváth, Zsuzsanna, Isaszegi, Dóra, Gergev, Gyurgyinka, Nagy, Nikoletta, Szabó, János, Sztriha, László, Széll, Márta, Endreffy, Emőke
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
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Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3846355/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24011290
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1755-8166-6-35
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author Horváth, Emese
Horváth, Zsuzsanna
Isaszegi, Dóra
Gergev, Gyurgyinka
Nagy, Nikoletta
Szabó, János
Sztriha, László
Széll, Márta
Endreffy, Emőke
author_facet Horváth, Emese
Horváth, Zsuzsanna
Isaszegi, Dóra
Gergev, Gyurgyinka
Nagy, Nikoletta
Szabó, János
Sztriha, László
Széll, Márta
Endreffy, Emőke
author_sort Horváth, Emese
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Angelman syndrome is a rare neurogenetic disorder that results in intellectual and developmental disturbances, seizures, jerky movements and frequent smiling. Angelman syndrome is caused by two genetic disturbances: either genes on the maternally inherited chromosome 15 are deleted or inactivated or two paternal copies of the corresponding genes are inherited (paternal uniparental disomy). A 16-month-old child was referred with minor facial anomalies, neurodevelopmental delay and speech impairment. The clinical symptoms suggested angelman syndrome. The aim of our study was to elucidate the genetic background of this case. RESULTS: This study reports the earliest diagnosed angelman syndrome in a 16-month-old Hungarian child. Cytogenetic results suggested a de novo Robertsonian-like translocation involving both q arms of chromosome 15: 45,XY,der(15;15)(q10;q10). Molecular genetic studies with polymorphic short tandem repeat markers of the fibrillin-1 gene, located in the 15q21.1, revealed that both arms of the translocated chromosome were derived from a single paternal chromosome 15 (isodisomy) and led to the diagnosis of angelman syndrome caused by paternal uniparental disomy. CONCLUSIONS: AS resulting from paternal uniparental disomy caused by de novo balanced translocation t(15q;15q) of a single paternal chromosome has been reported by other groups. This paper reviews 19 previously published comparable cases of the literature. Our paper contributes to the deeper understanding of the phenotype-genotype correlation in angelman syndrome for non-deletion subclasses and suggests that patients with uniparental disomy have milder symptoms and higher BMI than the ones with other underlying genetic abnormalities.
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spelling pubmed-38463552013-12-03 Early detection of Angelman syndrome resulting from de novo paternal isodisomic 15q UPD and review of comparable cases Horváth, Emese Horváth, Zsuzsanna Isaszegi, Dóra Gergev, Gyurgyinka Nagy, Nikoletta Szabó, János Sztriha, László Széll, Márta Endreffy, Emőke Mol Cytogenet Case Report BACKGROUND: Angelman syndrome is a rare neurogenetic disorder that results in intellectual and developmental disturbances, seizures, jerky movements and frequent smiling. Angelman syndrome is caused by two genetic disturbances: either genes on the maternally inherited chromosome 15 are deleted or inactivated or two paternal copies of the corresponding genes are inherited (paternal uniparental disomy). A 16-month-old child was referred with minor facial anomalies, neurodevelopmental delay and speech impairment. The clinical symptoms suggested angelman syndrome. The aim of our study was to elucidate the genetic background of this case. RESULTS: This study reports the earliest diagnosed angelman syndrome in a 16-month-old Hungarian child. Cytogenetic results suggested a de novo Robertsonian-like translocation involving both q arms of chromosome 15: 45,XY,der(15;15)(q10;q10). Molecular genetic studies with polymorphic short tandem repeat markers of the fibrillin-1 gene, located in the 15q21.1, revealed that both arms of the translocated chromosome were derived from a single paternal chromosome 15 (isodisomy) and led to the diagnosis of angelman syndrome caused by paternal uniparental disomy. CONCLUSIONS: AS resulting from paternal uniparental disomy caused by de novo balanced translocation t(15q;15q) of a single paternal chromosome has been reported by other groups. This paper reviews 19 previously published comparable cases of the literature. Our paper contributes to the deeper understanding of the phenotype-genotype correlation in angelman syndrome for non-deletion subclasses and suggests that patients with uniparental disomy have milder symptoms and higher BMI than the ones with other underlying genetic abnormalities. BioMed Central 2013-09-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3846355/ /pubmed/24011290 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1755-8166-6-35 Text en Copyright © 2013 Horváth et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Case Report
Horváth, Emese
Horváth, Zsuzsanna
Isaszegi, Dóra
Gergev, Gyurgyinka
Nagy, Nikoletta
Szabó, János
Sztriha, László
Széll, Márta
Endreffy, Emőke
Early detection of Angelman syndrome resulting from de novo paternal isodisomic 15q UPD and review of comparable cases
title Early detection of Angelman syndrome resulting from de novo paternal isodisomic 15q UPD and review of comparable cases
title_full Early detection of Angelman syndrome resulting from de novo paternal isodisomic 15q UPD and review of comparable cases
title_fullStr Early detection of Angelman syndrome resulting from de novo paternal isodisomic 15q UPD and review of comparable cases
title_full_unstemmed Early detection of Angelman syndrome resulting from de novo paternal isodisomic 15q UPD and review of comparable cases
title_short Early detection of Angelman syndrome resulting from de novo paternal isodisomic 15q UPD and review of comparable cases
title_sort early detection of angelman syndrome resulting from de novo paternal isodisomic 15q upd and review of comparable cases
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3846355/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24011290
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1755-8166-6-35
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