Mosaicism for trisomy 17 in amniocyte cultures is a rare finding, whilst postnatal cases are exceptional. In order to gain insight into the possible effects of the distribution of the trisomic line and of uniparental disomy (UPD) on embryofoetal development, we have performed follow-up clinical, cytogenetic and molecular investigations into three newly detected prenatal cases of trisomy 17 mosaicism identified in cultured amniotic fluid. In the first case, the pregnancy ended normally with the birth of a healthy girl, and analysis of newborn lymphocytes and of multiple extra-embryonic tissues was indicative of confined placental mosaicism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report cytogenetic and molecular investigations performed in two cases of mosaic trisomy 8 combined with mosaic sex chromosome aneuploidy. In a 35-year-old female, presenting with short stature, gonadal dysgenesis, and a multiple congenital anomalies/mental retardation syndrome typical of trisomy 8, chromosome analysis from peripheral lymphocytes showed the presence of three cell lines, whose karyotypes were 45,X (59.2%), 46,X,+8 (1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe a boy with an interstitial deletion of the proximal portion of chromosome 3q. Prominent physical characteristics were a dysmorphic face with apparent hypertelorism, signs of prenatal lymphedema, foot contractures and agenesis of the corpus callosum. The finding of corpus callosum agenesis in a previously reported patient with an overlapping deletion suggests an additional locus for this malformation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on an infant with partial tetrasomy of chromosome 9 due to the presence in her peripheral lymphocytes and in 55% of skin fibroblasts of an isochromosome 9 comprised of the p arm and of a portion of the q arm extending to band q21.1. The phenotype is comparable to that of other cases with a similar chromosome aberration, with multiple joint dislocations as a prominent manifestation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA patient with mental retardation and clinical manifestations suggestive of Noonan syndrome was found to have in her peripheral lymphocytes multiple small accessory marker chromosomes, varying in number from one to five per cell and in size from about half the size of the q arm of a G group chromosome to less than a centromere. Occasionally, in the more elongated markers, a G-positive or a C-positive band could be identified, or the marker had the appearance of a ring. The origin and significance of these marker chromosomes are discussed.
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