Familial Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome resulting from a cryptic translocation: A clinical and molecular study

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Abstract

We present three cousins who have normal karyotypes, despite having clinical features of Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome. Fluorescence in situ hybridisation techniques confirmed that all three relatives were monosomic for the distal short arm of chromosome 4 and that a cryptic translocation involving chromosomes 4 and 11 was segregating within the family. Segregation analysis indicated that the risk of an affected child being born to a parent carrying the translocation was 15%. Molecular analysis showed that loci D4S111 and D4S115 were not deleted in the proband, thus excluding these loci from the 'Wolf-Hirschhorn critical region'. Surprisingly, DNA studies also suggested that the translocation breakpoint on chromosome 4 was within the region of a preexisting paracentric inversion.

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Reid, E., Morrison, N., Barron, L., Boyd, E., Cooke, A., Fielding, D., & Tolmie, J. L. (1996). Familial Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome resulting from a cryptic translocation: A clinical and molecular study. Journal of Medical Genetics, 33(3), 197–202. https://doi.org/10.1136/jmg.33.3.197

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