Publications by authors named "Annette Cockwell"

A significant proportion of both pericentric and paracentric inversions have recurrent breakpoints and so could either have arisen through multiple independent events or be identical by descent (IBD) with a single common ancestor. Of two common variant inversions previously studied, the inv(2)(p11q13) was genuinely recurrent while the inv(10)(p11.2q21.

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Trisomy 13 is one of the most common trisomies in clinically recognized pregnancies and one of the few trisomies identified in liveborns, yet relatively little is known about the errors that lead to trisomy 13. Accordingly, we initiated studies to investigate the origin of the extra chromosome in 78 cases of trisomy 13. Our results indicate that the majority of cases (>91%) are maternal in origin and, similar to other autosomal trisomies, the extra chromosome is typically due to errors in meiosis I.

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Using fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) with the probe p15 (D15Z1), we investigated the distribution of the polymorphic 15p signal which has been reported to occur on acrocentric chromosomes in addition to chromosome 15. The short arm of chromosome 15 has a characteristic signal pattern when hybridized with the FISH probe D15Z1. However, the D15Z1 signal can occasionally be seen on the short arm of other acrocentric chromosomes.

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Article Synopsis
  • Trisomy 6 is often linked to early miscarriages and can appear as mosaicism in amniotic fluid cultures, but a case of mosaic trisomy 6 was found in a 23-week pregnancy that ended due to fetal death.
  • The post-mortem examination revealed a male fetus with serious defects, including an atrioventricular septal defect and exomphalos, indicating significant developmental issues.
  • Cytogenetic testing showed a high percentage of trisomy 6 in fibroblast colonies from fetal skin and amnion, but molecular studies later revealed that the chromosome 6s came exclusively from the mother, suggesting maternal uniparental disomy (UPD) instead of true trisomy.
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Pallister-Killian syndrome (PKS) is a rare, sporadic, genetic disorder characterized by dysmorphic features, learning disability, and epilepsy. It is caused by a mosaic supernumerary isochromosome 12p (i[12p]). The i(12p) is rarely found in peripheral blood but it is present in skin fibroblasts.

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Fifty chromosomally normal couples with three or more miscarriages were examined using fluorescent in situ hybridisation (FISH) and a library of subtelomere-specific probes together with alphoid repeats mapping to the acrocentric centromeres. Six abnormalities were found. Firstly, a cryptic reciprocal subtelomere translocation between the long arm of a chromosome 3 and the short arm of a chromosome 10.

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Paternal duplications of distal 11p result in Beckwith Wiedemann syndrome (BWS), whereas maternal duplications have not, to our knowledge, been reported previously in the literature. We present three unrelated patients with maternal duplications of distal 11p. Patient 1 is a 31-year-old female with a de novo inverted duplication of distal 11p, i.

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