Turner syndrome caused by rare complex structural abnormalities involving chromosome X

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Abstract

Turner syndrome (TS) is a phenotypic heterogeneous genetic disorder caused by the loss of an X-chromosome or X-structural abnormalities in the X-chromosome, and affects approximately 1 in every 2,500 females. The affected individuals may develop diverse clinical features, including short stature, ovarian dysgenesis, skeletal dysplasia, facial abnormalities and other disorders. A constitutional karyotype of 45, X accounts for nearly 50% of TS patients, while X-mosaicism and other X-chromosomal structural abnormalities, including deletions, duplications, ring, isodicentric chromosomes, inversions and translocations, have been reported in other cases. The present study reports the results of chromosome micro-array analysis (CMA) in two Chinese female TS patients with idiosyncratic karyotypes. The first patient had a karyotype of 46, X, der(X), and the CMA results demonstrated that the derivative chromosome was an abnormal X-chromosome that consisted of three deletions (Xp21.3-p11.23, Xp11.1-q13.1 and Xq21.31-q28), as well as three duplications (Xp22.33-p21.3, Xp11.23-p11.1 and Xq13.1-q21.31). The karyotype of the second patient was 46, X, der(X) t(X;?)(q 22.1;?),inv(11) (q13.5q21), while CMA revealed an Xq21.2-q27.1 duplication and an Xq27.2-q28 deletion. In conclusion, the current study performed genotype-phenotype correlation analysis in two patients and provided novel insight of the genotype of TS.

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Li, N., Zhao, L., Li, J., Ding, Y., Shen, Y., Huang, X., … Wang, J. (2017). Turner syndrome caused by rare complex structural abnormalities involving chromosome X. Experimental and Therapeutic Medicine, 14(3), 2265–2270. https://doi.org/10.3892/etm.2017.4756

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