A female patient with retinoblastoma and severe intellectual disability carrying an X;13 balanced translocation without rearrangement in the RB1 gene: a case report
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Published:2019-12
Issue:1
Volume:12
Page:
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ISSN:1755-8794
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Container-title:BMC Medical Genomics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:BMC Med Genomics
Author:
Tsutsumi Makiko, Hattori Hiroyoshi, Akita Nobuhiro, Maeda Naoko, Kubota Toshinobu, Horibe Keizo, Fujita Naoko, Kawai Miki, Shinkai Yasuko, Kato Maki, Kato Takema, Kawamura Rie, Suzuki Fumihiko, Kurahashi HirokiORCID
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Female carriers of a balanced X; autosome translocation generally undergo selective inactivation of the normal X chromosome. This is because inactivation of critical genes within the autosomal region of the derivative translocation chromosome would compromise cellular function. We here report a female patient with bilateral retinoblastoma and a severe intellectual disability who carries a reciprocal X-autosomal translocation.
Case presentation
Cytogenetic and molecular analyses, a HUMARA (Human androgen receptor) assay, and methylation specific PCR (MSP) and bisulfite sequencing were performed using peripheral blood samples from the patient. The patient’s karyotype was 46,X,t(X;13)(q28;q14.1) by G-banding analysis. Further cytogenetic analysis located the entire RB1 gene and its regulatory region on der(X) with no translocation disruption. The X-inactivation pattern in the peripheral blood was highly skewed but not completely selected. MSP and deep sequencing of bisulfite-treated DNA revealed that an extensive 13q region, including the RB1 promoter, was unusually methylated in a subset of cells.
Conclusions
The der(X) region harboring the RB1 gene was inactivated in a subset of somatic cells, including the retinal cells, in the patient subject which acted as the first hit in the development of her retinoblastoma. In addition, the patient’s intellectual disability may be attributable to the inactivation of the der(X), leading to a 13q deletion syndrome-like phenotype, or to an active X-linked gene on der (13) leading to Xq28 functional disomy.
Funder
Scientific Research from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology of Japan Ministry of Health, Welfare and Labor of Japan Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Genetics
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