Engels H, Brockschmidt A, Hoischen A, Landwehr C, Bosse K, Walldorf C, Toedt G, Radlwimmer B, Propping P, Lichter P, Weber R G
Department of Human Genetics, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-University, Wilhelmstrasse 31, D-53111 Bonn, Germany.
Neurology. 2007 Mar 6;68(10):743-50. doi: 10.1212/01.wnl.0000256367.70365.e0.
Because in most patients with mental retardation (MR), who constitute 2 to 3% of the population, the etiology remains unknown, we wanted to identify novel chromosomal candidate regions and genes associated with the MR phenotype.
We screened for microimbalances in 60 clinically well-characterized patients with unexplained MR mostly combined with congenital anomalies. Genome-wide array-based comparative genomic hybridization was performed on DNA microarrays with an average resolution of <0.5 Mb. We verified every nonpolymorphic array clone outside the diagnostic thresholds by fluorescence in situ hybridization and performed breakpoint analyses on confirmed imbalances.
Six presumably causal microimbalances were detected, five of which have not been reported. Microdeletions were found in five patients with MR and distinctive facial features, who also had neurologic findings (three cases), brain anomalies (two cases), and growth retardation (two cases), in chromosomal bands 6q11.1-q13 (10.8 Mb), Xq21.31-q21.33 (4.0 Mb), 1q24.1-q24.2 (3.8 Mb), 19p13.12 (2.1 Mb), and 4p12-p13 (1.1 Mb). One microduplication was detected in 22q11.2 (2.8 Mb) including the DiGeorge syndrome critical region in a patient with mild MR, microcephaly at birth, and dysmorphisms. Three imbalances were shown to be de novo and two inherited. The Xq21 microdeletion in a boy with borderline intellectual functioning was inherited from a normal mother; the 22q11.2 microduplication was inherited from a normal father and was present in two affected siblings.
We could identify novel microimbalances as the probable cause of mental retardation in 10% of patients with unclear etiology. The gene content of the microimbalances was found to correlate with phenotype severity. Precise breakpoint analyses allowed the identification of deleted genes presumably causing mental retardation.
由于占人口2%至3%的大多数智力发育迟缓(MR)患者的病因仍不明,我们希望确定与MR表型相关的新的染色体候选区域和基因。
我们对60例临床特征明确、病因不明的MR患者(大多合并先天性异常)进行了微失衡筛查。在平均分辨率<0.5 Mb的DNA微阵列上进行全基因组基于阵列的比较基因组杂交。我们通过荧光原位杂交验证了诊断阈值以外的每个非多态性阵列克隆,并对确认的失衡进行了断点分析。
检测到6个可能致病的微失衡,其中5个未见报道。在5例患有MR且有独特面部特征的患者中发现了微缺失,这些患者还伴有神经学表现(3例)、脑异常(2例)和生长发育迟缓(2例),分别位于染色体带6q11.1 - q13(10.8 Mb)、Xq(21.31 - q21.33(4.0 Mb)、1q24.1 - q24.2(3.8 Mb)、19p13.12(2.1 Mb)和4p12 - p13(1.1 Mb)。在1例轻度MR、出生时小头畸形和畸形的患者中,在22q11.2(2.8 Mb)检测到1个微重复,包括DiGeorge综合征关键区域。3个失衡显示为新发,2个为遗传。1例边缘智力功能男孩的Xq21微缺失遗传自正常母亲;22q11.2微重复遗传自正常父亲,且在2个患病同胞中也存在。
我们能够确定新的微失衡是10%病因不明的患者智力发育迟缓的可能原因。发现微失衡的基因内容与表型严重程度相关。精确的断点分析有助于识别可能导致智力发育迟缓的缺失基因。