Interstitial 9q22.3 microdeletion: Clinical and molecular characterisation of a newly recognised overgrowth syndrome

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Abstract

In the course of a systematic whole genome screening of patients with unexplained overgrowth syndrome by microarray-based comparative genomic hybridisation (array-CGH), we have identified two children with nearly identical 6.5Mb-long de novo interstitial deletions at 9q22.32-q22.33. The clinical phenotype includes macrocephaly, overgrowth and trigonocephaly. In addition, both children present with psychomotor delay, hyperactivity and distinctive facial features. Further analysis with a high-resolution custom microarray covering the whole breakpoint intervals with fosmids mapped the deletion breakpoints within 100-kb intervals: although the deletion boundaries are different for the two patients, nearly the same genes are deleted in both cases. We suggest therefore that microdeletion of 9q22.32-q22.33 is a novel cause of overgrowth and mental retardation. Its association with distinctive facial features should help in recognising this novel phenotype. © 2006 Nature Publishing Group. All rights reserved.

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Redon, R., Baujat, G., Sanlaville, D., Le Merrer, M., Vekemans, M., Munnich, A., … Colleaux, L. (2006). Interstitial 9q22.3 microdeletion: Clinical and molecular characterisation of a newly recognised overgrowth syndrome. European Journal of Human Genetics, 14(6), 759–767. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ejhg.5201613

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