Abstract
Sex-chromosome discordant chimerism (XX/XY chimerism) is a rare chromosomal disorder in humans. We report a boy with ambiguous genitalia and hypospadias, showing 46,XY[26]/46,XX[4] in peripheral blood cells. To clarify the mechanism of how this chimerism took place, we carried out whole-genome genotyping using a SNP array and microsatellite analysis. The B-allele frequency of the SNP array showed a mixture of three and five allele combinations, which excluded mosaicism but not chimerism, and suggested the fusion of two embryos or a shared parental haplotype between the two parental cells. All microsatellite markers showed a single maternal allele. From these results, we concluded that this XX/XY chimera is composed of two different paternal alleles and a single duplicated maternal genome. This XX/XY chimera likely arose from a diploid maternal cell that was formed via endoduplication of the maternal genome just before fertilization, being fertilized with both X and Y sperm.
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CITATION STYLE
Kawamura, R., Kato, T., Miyai, S., Suzuki, F., Naru, Y., Kato, M., … Taniguchi-Ikeda, M. (2020). A case of a parthenogenetic 46,XX/46,XY chimera presenting ambiguous genitalia. Journal of Human Genetics, 65(8), 705–709. https://doi.org/10.1038/s10038-020-0748-4
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