Cases reported "Translocation, Genetic"

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121/4582. Carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome in a newborn with an unbalanced chromosomal translocation.

    Carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndromes may occur as a primary result of distinct genetic disruption of the enzymes involved in processing the carbohydrate moeities of glycoproteins. They may also occur due to a number of secondary defects in glycosylation. CONCLUSION: A female infant with an unbalanced chromosomal translocation [46,XX,der(21)t(17;21) (p13.1;q22.11)mat.ish der(21)t(17;21) (D17S375 x 3, D21S65-)] and with biochemical and clinical features of a carbohydrate deficient glycoprotein syndrome is reported. This chromosomal disruption is another secondary cause of the disorder. ( info)

122/4582. Occurrence of both t(1;19) and t(8;14) in a patient with chronic lymphocytic leukemia.

    While t(1;19) and t(8;14) have been reported singly in pre-B-ALL and Burkitt's lymphoma, respectively, the occurrence of both translocations simultaneously in the same patient is rare. Indeed, a review of the English literature from 1966 to 1999 revealed no case reports with these findings. We report here an 88-year-old patient who was clinically diagnosed to have chronic lymphocytic leukemia and who carried both translocations in her peripheral blood cells. The patient refused to give consent for a bone marrow sample, the preferred tissue for study. The patient's clinical findings are discussed, although the relationship between the clinical information and cytogenetic findings, if any, is not known. Study of additional cases identical to ours will be helpful in determining the correlation, if any, between the patient's phenotype and the occurrence of the two translocations. ( info)

123/4582. Clinical aspects of alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma with translocation t(1;13)(p36;q14) and hypotetraploidy.

    Although most cases of alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma (RMS) are characterized by the chromosomal translocation t(2;13)(q35;q14), several cases have been reported with a variant t(1;13)(p36;q14). We present the clinical, morphological and cytogenetic features of an alveolar RMS in a 4-year-old boy. Chromosomal analysis revealed a hypertriploid to hypotetraploid karyotype with a t(1;13)(p36;q14) in all tumor cells. It appears that alveolar RMS with t(1;13) occurs in younger children and displays a higher incidence to upper and lower extremity than tumors with t(2;13). ( info)

124/4582. Male infertility associated with a unique 8;22 translocation.

    Proper evaluation of male infertility includes a careful history, physical examination, semen analysis, and karyotyping. Molecular cytogenetic analysis may also be necessary to further delineate the karyotype. Following the above approach, we found an apparently unique 8;22 translocation in a male patient with infertility but few other phenotypic manifestations. Delineating the exact genetic basis of infertility is important in view of the most recent advances in reproductive technology such as in vitro fertilization and intracytoplasmic sperm injection. patients utilizing these emerging techniques need to be properly counseled as to their risks of transmitting these chromosomal abnormalities to their offspring. ( info)

125/4582. Duplication of 7p21.2-->pter due to maternal 7p;21q translocation: implications for critical segment assignment in the 7p duplication syndrome.

    We describe a 1-year-old boy with mental and physical retardation, a large anterior fontanel, brachycephaly with flat occiput, short and stubby fingers, generalized hypotonia, ocular hypertelorism, low-nasal bridge, long philtrum, high-narrow palate, apparently low-set ears, and a small mandible. cytogenetic analysis utilizing high resolution chromosome banding technique showed an unbalanced karyotype consisting of 46,XY,add(21)(q22.3) that originated from maternal balanced translocation between chromosomes 7 and 21. fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) using micro-dissected library probe pool from chromosome 7 confirmed the additional material on 21q was derived from chromosome 7. Our results indicated that the patient had an unbalanced translocation, 46,XY, der(21)t(7;21)(p21.2;q22.3)mat, which resulted in duplication for distal 7p. Our patient is similar to reported cases with a 7p15-->pter or larger duplication of 7p, suggesting that the critical segment causing the characteristic phenotype of 7p duplication syndrome, including large anterior fontanel, exists at 7p21.2 or 7p21.2-->pter. ( info)

126/4582. Detection of a cryptic translocation t(13;20)(q34;p13) in an unexplained case of MCA/MR: value of FISH over high resolution banding.

    Cryptic unbalanced chromosome rearrangements in the telomeric bands of the chromosomes may constitute a significant cause of unexplained mental retardation with or without congenital anomalies. We report on a boy with a terminal deletion of the long arm of chromosome 13, combined with a partial duplication of the short arm of chromosome 20, owing to a cryptic balanced translocation in his father. The karyotype of the father was 46XY,t(13;20)(q34;p13). The propositus presented with severe mental and growth retardation, microcephaly, facial anomalies including ptosis of the right upper eyelid, a high nasal bridge, small palpebral fissures, and bilateral epicanthus, hypospadias, and scoliosis. A younger brother died at birth and had a low birth weight, hypospadias, and a horseshoe kidney. Repeated chromosome analyses with high resolution banding in the propositus and his parents were apparently normal. chromosome painting eventually disclosed the cryptic translocation in the father with unbalanced karyotype in the propositus. The importance of additional FISH analysis in patients with unexplained mental retardation, physical anomalies, and apparently normal chromosomes is emphasized. ( info)

127/4582. Primary intraocular lymphoma with a low interleukin 10 to interleukin 6 ratio and heterogeneous IgH gene rearrangement.

    Primary intraocular lymphoma is almost always a central nervous system B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphoma. Primary intraocular lymphoma is commonly diagnosed by demonstrating lymphoma cells in the vitreous or cerebrospinal fluid. An interleukin (IL) 10 to IL-6 ratio greater than 1.0 in these fluids and the detection of immunoglobulin gene rearrangement are useful adjuncts in the diagnosis of primary intraocular lymphoma. We report a case of primary intraocular lymphoma diagnosed by chorioretinal biopsy in which no malignant cells were identified in the vitreous and in which the IL-10 to IL-6 ratio was less than 1.0. The detection of IgH gene rearrangement heterogeneity in the tumor cells by polymerase chain reaction, a high tumor mitotic figure rate, and the rapid onset of multiple brain lesions suggest an aggressive malignant neoplasm. ( info)

128/4582. Fusion of TEL/ETV6 to a novel ACS2 in myelodysplastic syndrome and acute myelogenous leukemia with t(5;12)(q31;p13).

    We identified a novel human long fatty acyl CoA synthetase 2 gene, ACS2, as a new ETV6 fusion partner gene in a recurrent t(5;12)(q31;p13) translocation in a patient with refractory anemia with excess blasts (RAEB) with basophilia, a patient with acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) with eosinophilia, and a patient with acute eosinophilic leukemia (AEL). ACS2 is expressed in the brain and bone marrow and is highly conserved in man and rats. The resulting ETV6/ACS2 fusion transcripts showed an out-frame fusion of exon 1 of ETV6 to exon 1 of ACS2 in the AEL case, an out-frame fusion of exon 1 of ETV6 to exon 11 of ACS2 in the AML case, and a short in-frame fusion of ETV6 exon 1 to the 3' untranslated region of ACS2 in the RAEB case. Reciprocal ACS2/ETV6 transcripts were identified in two of the cases. fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis with ETV6 cosmids on 12p13, and BACs and P1s on 5q31, demonstrated that the 5q31 breakpoints of the AML and AEL cases involved the 5' portion of the ACS2 gene, and that the 5q31, breakpoint of the RAEB case involved the 3' portion of the ACS2 gene. None of the resulting chimeric transcripts except for the ACS2/ETV6 transcript in the RAEB case led to a fusion protein. Disruption of the second ETV6 allele by t(12;19) was detected in the AML case by FISH analysis. These observations suggest that the disruption of ETV6 and/or ACS2 may lead to the pathogenesis of hematologic malignancies with t(5;12)(q31;p13). ( info)

129/4582. Recurrent t(16;17)(q22;p13) in aneurysmal bone cysts.

    Aneurysmal bone cyst (ABC) is a benign bone lesion for which no previous cytogenetic data exist. We describe the finding of clonal chromosome aberrations in three tumors; two had a t(16;17)(q22;p13) as the sole anomaly, and the third had a del(16)(q22) as the only change. These findings show that somatic mutations contribute to the development of ABC and furthermore indicate that bands 16q22 and 17p13 may harbor genes of importance in this process. ( info)

130/4582. CALL gene is haploinsufficient in a 3p- syndrome patient.

    The 3p- syndrome results from deletion of a terminal segment of the short arm of one chromosome 3 (3p25-->pter), and is characterized by multiple congenital anomalies and mental retardation. Due to its variable expression, it is assumed this disorder is a contiguous gene syndrome with an undefined number of genes contributing to the phenotype. In an effort to discover genes contributing to mental defects in 3p- syndrome, we determined whether the CALL gene, mapped to 3p26.1 and coding for a neural recognition molecule, is deleted in a boy with this disorder. We found that the break in this patient is distal to the VHL gene, removing D3S18 and the CALL loci. The deletion of one copy of the CALL gene might be responsible for mental defects in patients with 3p- syndrome. Am. J. Med. Genet. 86:482-485, 1999. Published 1999 Wiley-Liss, Inc. ( info)
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