Unlabelled: We report a 13-month-old male infant with an apparently normal karyotype, severe growth and developmental delay, ichthyosis, hypogonadism, limb shortness, hypoplasia of the corpus callosum and a round, flat face and thin upper lip as a consequence of a subtelomeric del/dup event of the X chromosome. The recombinant X chromosome (rec(X)), derived from crossing-over within the inversion, was identified in a family, in which the mother is a carrier of pericentric inversion of one X chromosome and pericentric inversion of the heterochromatic region of chromosome 9. The inv(X) chromosome was also analysed in her sister and daughter. The rec(X) had a duplication of the segment Xq27.3-->Xqter and deletion of the Xp22.31-->Xpter and was interpreted as Xqter-Xq27.3::Xp22.31-Xqter. The rec (X) was characterised by FISH using a number of BAC probes. There are only three published reports of chromosome rearrangements resulting in a similar subtelomeric duplication of Xq in males. The proband's phenotype corresponds to descriptions of contiguous gene syndromes due to deletion of the STS, SHOX, ARSE and KAL genes. Despite the loss of the ARSE gene there was no evidence of chondrodysplasia punctata. Additional conditions associated with duplication of the Xq28 segment, such as severe growth retardation and developmental delay, a peculiar head shape, atrophy of the cerebral hemispheres and hypoplasia of the cerebellum and corpus callosum, were observed.

Conclusion: Fluorescent in situ hybridisation techniques using subtelomeric DNA probes are essential tools for detection of such complex submicroscopic chromosomal rearrangements as the dup/del event of the X chromosome described in our patient.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00431-004-1519-5DOI Listing

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