Publications by authors named "L Romitti"

Article Synopsis
  • * Researchers studied 220 specimens with structural abnormalities in chromosome 11 and identified various types of chromosomal changes, confirming that OR genes do not play a role in these rearrangements.
  • * The analysis indicated that structural changes in chromosome 11 may be influenced by DNA motifs and chromosome interactions, suggesting more research is needed to understand the implications for medical and evolutionary genetics.
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Article Synopsis
  • - The study investigated 31 cases of chromosome 18 rearrangements, noting that 16 involved acrocentric chromosomes and highlighting the fragility of the centromere region due to repetitive sequences.
  • - Significant findings included an increased occurrence of reciprocal translocations between the centromere of chromosome 18 and regions of acrocentric chromosomes, with detailed accounts of five translocation cases and one involving telomere regions.
  • - Evidence supporting the idea that chromosome 18 preferentially recombines with acrocentrics was provided through segmental duplications, observations via 2D-FISH, and contact analysis using Hi-C data from human lymphoblastoid cells.
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The cytogenetic hallmark of Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML) is the presence of Philadelphia (Ph) chromosome, which results from a reciprocal translocation t(9;22)(q34;q11). In this report, we describe a CML patient with no evidence of Ph chromosome but trisomy of chromosome 8 as single cytogenetic abnormality and a typical e14a2 (b3a2) BCR-ABL1 fusion transcript. Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization (FISH) analysis revealed an uncommon signal pattern: the fusion signals were located on both copies of chromosome 22.

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Satellited non-acrocentric autosomal chromosomes (ps-qs-chromosomes) are the result of an interchange between sub- or telomeric regions of autosomes and the p arm of acrocentrics. The sequence homology at the rearrangement breakpoints appears to be, among others, the most frequent mechanism generating these variant chromosomes. The unbalanced carriers of this type of translocation may or may not display phenotypic abnormalities.

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Chromosomal anomalies are well known to be an important cause of infertility, sterility and pregnancy loss. Balanced Reciprocal Translocation Mosaicism (BRTM) is an extremely rare phenomenon, mainly observed in subjects with a normal phenotype accompanied by reproductive failure. To date the mechanism of origin and the incidence of BRTM are poorly defined.

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