Autism Spectrum Disorder in a Girl with aDe NovoX;19 Balanced Translocation

Author:

Baruffi Marcelo Razera1,de Souza Deise Helena1,Bicudo da Silva Rosana Aparecida1,Ramos Ester Silveira2,Moretti-Ferreira Danilo1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Genetics, Bioscience Institute of Botucatu, São Paulo State University (UNESP), 18618-970 Botucatu, SP, Brazil

2. Department of Genetics, School of Medicine of Ribeirão Preto, University of São Paulo (USP), 14049-900 Ribeirão Preto, SP, Brazil

Abstract

Balanced X-autosome translocations are rare, and female carriers are a clinically heterogeneous group of patients, with phenotypically normal women, history of recurrent miscarriage, gonadal dysfunction, X-linked disorders or congenital abnormalities, and/or developmental delay. We investigated a patient with ade novoX;19 translocation. The six-year-old girl has been evaluated due to hyperactivity, social interaction impairment, stereotypic and repetitive use of language with echolalia, failure to follow parents/caretakers orders, inconsolable outbursts, and persistent preoccupation with parts of objects. The girl has normal cognitive function. Her measurements are within normal range, and no other abnormalities were found during physical, neurological, or dysmorphological examinations. Conventional cytogenetic analysis showed ade novobalanced translocation, with the karyotype 46,X,t(X;19)(p21.2;q13.4). Replication banding showed a clear preference for inactivation of the normal X chromosome. The translocation was confirmed by FISH and Spectral Karyotyping (SKY). Although abnormal phenotypes associated withde novobalanced chromosomal rearrangements may be the result of disruption of a gene at one of the breakpoints, submicroscopic deletion or duplication, or a position effect, X; autosomal translocations are associated with additional unique risk factors including X-linked disorders, functional autosomal monosomy, or functional X chromosome disomy resulting from the complex X-inactivation process.

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

Subject

General Medicine

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