The 5p13 microduplication syndrome is a contiguous gene syndrome characterized by developmental delay intellectual disability, hypotonia, unusual facies with marked variability, mild limb anomalies, and in some cases brain malformations. The duplication ranges in size from 0.25 to 1.08 Mb and encompasses five genes (NIPBL, SLC1A3, CPLANE1, NUP155, and WDR70), of which NIPBL has been suggested to be the main dose sensitive gene. All patients with duplication of the complete NIPBL gene reported thus far have been de novo. Here, we report a 25-week-old male fetus with hypertelorism, wide and depressed nasal bridge, depressed nasal tip, low-set ears, clenched hands, flexion contracture of elbows, knees, and left wrist, and bilateral clubfeet, bowing and shortening of long bones and brain malformation of dorsal part of callosal body. The fetus had a 667 kb gain at 5p13.2 encompassing SLC1A3, NIPBL and exons 22-52 of CPLANE1. The microduplication was inherited from the healthy father, in whom no indication for mosaicism was detected. The family demonstrates that incomplete penetrance of 5p13 microduplication syndrome may occur which is important in genetic counseling of families with this entity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.a.63030 | DOI Listing |
Am J Med Genet A
February 2023
Department of Pediatrics, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
The 5p13 microduplication syndrome is a contiguous gene syndrome characterized by developmental delay intellectual disability, hypotonia, unusual facies with marked variability, mild limb anomalies, and in some cases brain malformations. The duplication ranges in size from 0.25 to 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Obstet Gynaecol
May 2022
Prenatal Diagnosis Center, Guangzhou Women and Children's Medical Center, Guangzhou, China.
Eur J Med Res
June 2021
IGENOMIX Lab S.L.U., Parque tecnológico, Ronda Narciso Monturiol, 11B, Edificios Europark, 46980, Paterna, Valencia, Spain.
Background: Since 2011, screening maternal blood for cell-free foetal DNA (cffDNA) fragments has offered a robust clinical tool to classify pregnancy as low or high-risk for Down, Edwards, and Patau syndromes. With recent advances in molecular biology and improvements in data analysis algorithms, the screening's scope of analysis continues to expand. Indeed, screening now encompassess additional conditions, including aneuploidies for sex chromosomes, microdeletions and microduplications, rare autosomal trisomies, and, more recently, segmental deletions and duplications called copy number variations (CNVs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Argent Pediatr
February 2020
Jena University Hospital, Friedrich Schiller University, Institute of Human Genetics, Jena, Germany.
The wide range of chromosome aberrations seen in neurodevelopmental disorders may not always be characterized by means of a chromosome analysis. The objective of this study was to determine the genetic etiology of these disorders in patients with congenital neurological conditions and clinical suspicion of a genetic disorder using a clinical and molecular testing algorithm. Among 111 studied children, 71 showed submicroscopic chromosome aberrations associated with microdeletion/microduplication syndromes: DiGeorge (22 cases), Prader-Willi (26 cases), Angelman (2 cases), WilliamsBeuren (17 cases), Smith-Magenis (1 case), Miller-Dieker (1 case), and syndrome (1 case).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCytogenet Genome Res
January 2018
Laboratory of Molecular and Cell Biology, Istituto Dermopatico dell'Immacolata (IDI) IRCCS, Rome, Italy.
A 17-year-old girl presented with a distinct phenotype mainly featuring craniofacial dysmorphism, including a disproportioned large, round, elongated face; hypertelorism; deep-set eyes with short palpebral fissures; obesity (BMI 37), and a neuropsychiatric disorder with high-functioning autism. Postnatal conventional cytogenetic analyses from peripheral blood revealed a mosaic small supernumerary marker chromosome (sSMC) with a mos 47,XX,+mar[7]/46,XX[43] karyotype. By cenM-FISH technique, the sSMC was identified as a ring derivative of chromosome 5.
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