Aicardi syndrome (AIS), a rare neurodevelopmental disorder thought to be caused by an X-linked dominant mutation, is characterized by 3 main features: agenesis of corpus callosum, infantile spams and chorioretinal lacunae. A genome-wide study of a girl with AIS lead us to identify a 6q deletion;12q duplication, derived from a maternal 6q;12q translocation. The two intellectually impaired brothers of the proband showed the same genomic anomalies, but not the constellation of features characterizing the AIS. This could be either a coincidental observation of 2 rare conditions, but can also suggest an alternative hypothesis for the genetic etiology of AIS, indicating the existence of a subset of autosomal genes whose mutation could act in a sex-confined manner. Copyright © 2013 S. Karger AG, Basel.
CITATION STYLE
Prontera, P., Bartocci, A., Ottaviani, V., Isidori, I., Rogaia, D., Ardisia, C., … Donti, E. (2013). Aicardi syndrome associated with autosomal genomic imbalance: Coincidence or evidence for autosomal inheritance with sex-limited expression? Molecular Syndromology, 4(4), 197–202. https://doi.org/10.1159/000350040
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