Constitutional chromothripsis involving the critical region of 9q21.13 microdeletion syndrome

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Abstract

Background: The chromothripsis is a biological phenomenon, first observed in tumors and then rapidly described in congenital disorders. The principle of the chromothripsis process is the occurrence of a local shattering to pieces and rebuilding of chromosomes in a random order. Congenital chromothripsis rearrangements often involve reciprocal rearrangements on multiple chromosomes and have been described as cause of contiguous gene syndromes. We hypothesize that chromothripsis could be responsible for known 9q21.13 microdeletion syndrome, causing a composite phenotype with additional features. Case presentation: The case reported is a 16- years-old female with a complex genomic rearrangement of chromosome 9 including the critical region of 9q21.13 microdeletion syndrome. The patient presents with platelet disorder and thyroid dysfunction in addition to the classical neurobehavioral phenotype of the syndrome. Conclusions: The presence of multiple rearrangements on the same chromosome 9 and the rebuilding of chromosome in a random order suggested that the rearrangement could origin from an event of chromthripsis. To our knowledge this is the first report of congenital chromothripsis involving chromosome 9. Furthermore this is the only case of 9q21.13 microdeletion syndrome due to chromothripsis.

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Genesio, R., Fontana, P., Mormile, A., Casertano, A., Falco, M., Conti, A., … Melis, D. (2015). Constitutional chromothripsis involving the critical region of 9q21.13 microdeletion syndrome. Molecular Cytogenetics, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13039-015-0199-3

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