Cases reported "ring chromosomes"

Filter by keywords:



Retrieving documents. Please wait...

11/404. Ring chromosome 22 resulting in partial monosomy in a mentally retarded boy.

    We describe a 7-year-old boy presenting with mental retardation and hyperactivity. Clinical features include microcephaly, hypertelorism, epicanthic eye folds and antimongoloid slant. He also has large ears, large hands and feet, and torticollis. The karyotype was 46, XY, r (22) (p13q13). In situ hybridisation studies with a subtelomeric probe for distal 22q confirmed that the ring was deleted causing partial monosomy of 22q. ( info)

12/404. Social, communicational, and behavioral deficits associated with ring X turner syndrome.

    We describe the cognitive and behavioral characteristics of five individuals with a ring x chromosome. All subjects had a small active (early replicating) ring x chromosome. The X inactive specific transcript (XIST) locus was confirmed by fluorescent in situ hybridisation (FISH) to be present in all ring X chromosomes. Mental retardation was present in four individuals. All patients with or without mental retardation had a characteristic profile of aggression toward self and others, episodes of screaming, attentional problems, and impulsiveness. Autistic-like features were also present in all individuals and included limited communication, obsessive compulsive behavior, and social difficulties. In some cases the obsessive behavior was extreme and incapacitating. This characteristic behavioral profile may aid the diagnosis and future understanding of ring X. ( info)

13/404. Origins of accessory small ring marker chromosomes derived from chromosome 1.

    Three patients with accessory small ring chromosomes derived from chromosome 1 are presented together with additional clinical details and cytogenetic analyses of a previously reported patient. cytogenetic analysis was undertaken by FISH using a reverse painting probe generated from one of the patients by microdissection of the r(1) chromosome and with a BAC923C6 which maps to 1p12. Results indicated that patients with r(1) chromosomes consisting of 1q12 heterochromatin and short arm pericentric euchromatin which extends to at least the BAC923C6 were associated with a normal or mild phenotype. patients with abnormal phenotypes possessed two types of rings. One patient had evidence for contiguous pericentric short arm euchromatin which extended from the centromere to beyond the BAC923C6. Two patients showed molecular cytogenetic results which were compatible with non-contiguous chromosome 1 euchromatin. The diversity of origin of r(1)s will hamper attempts to define phenotype/genotype relationships. ( info)

14/404. Characterization of a small supernumerary ring marker derived from chromosome 2 by forward and reverse chromosome painting.

    A small ring-shaped supernumerary marker chromosome (SMC) was detected in 50% of metaphase cells in an 18-month-old boy with mental retardation and multiple congenital anomalies. Conventional cytogenetic methods had failed to identify the origin of the marker. When the patient was age 11.5 years, we defined the origin of the SMC by fluorescence in situ hybridization using a battery of centromere-specific dna probes. The marker was positive with the probe for locus D2Z. More detailed characterization was achieved by using chromosome 2 arm-specific and marker-specific DNA libraries, which were constructed by microdissection of the two arms chromosome 2 and SMC with subsequent amplification of the chromosomal material by a degenerate oligonucleotide-primed polymerase chain reaction (DOP-PCR). The marker was identified as r(2)(p11.2-->q14.1). The propositus had dolichocephaly, coarse hair, low-set ears, exophthalmos, epicanthal folds, strabismus, depressed nasal bridge, high-arched palate, excess of skin on the neck, tapered fingers with mild clinodactyly, talipes varus on the right, inguinal hernia, hypogenitalism, muscular hypotonia, and mental retardation. This is the first case of SMC derived from chromosome 2 that was characterized by forward and reverse chromosome painting. ( info)

15/404. Myelodysplastic syndrome with atypical eosinophilia in association with ring chromosome 7. A case report.

    The presence of morphologically abnormal eosinophils in the bone marrow and/or peripheral blood has been rarely reported as a prominent feature in myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS). Specific chromosomal aberrations have been observed in such cases. We report a case of a 76-year-old man who presented with chronic, transfusion-dependent anemia. Peripheral blood smear analysis revealed anisocytes, mild leukopenia, and occasional hypersegmented eosinophils. A subsequent bone marrow biopsy and aspiration disclosed hypercellularity, and morphologic abnormalities within the megakaryocyte, erythroid, and myeloid series. The myeloid population was predominantly comprised of eosinophils with varying degrees of dyspoiesis. The constellation of hematologic findings were without a precise categorization according to the FAB classification of myelodysplastic syndromes. Subsequent cytogenetic techniques demonstrated a ring chromosome 7 in all 20 metaphases analyzed in cultured bone marrow cells. Eighty-five-percent of the analyzed cells showed a ring chromosome composed of both the long and short arms: r(7)(p22q36). In the remaining metaphases, the ring was composed of only the short arm: r(7)(p22q10). To our knowledge, these uncommon cytogenetic abnormalities have not been previously reported in association with MDS with morphologically atypical bone marrow or peripheral eosinophilia. ( info)

16/404. Neocentromere formation in a stable ring 1p32-p36.1 chromosome.

    Neocentromeres are functional centromeres formed in chromosome regions outside the normal centromere domains and are found in an increasing number of mitotically stable human marker chromosomes in both neoplastic and non-neoplastic cells. We describe here the formation of a neocentromere in a previously undescribed chromosomal region at 1p32-->p36.1 in an oligospermic patient. Cytogenetic GTL banding analysis and the absence of detectable fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) signals using telomeric probes indicate the marker to be a ring chromosome. The chromosome is negative for CBG banding and is devoid of detectable centromeric alpha satellite and its associated centromere protein CENP-B, suggesting activation of a neocentromere within the 1p32-36.1 region. Functional activity of the neocentromere is shown by the retention of the ring chromosome in 97% of the patient's lymphocytes and 100% of his cultured fibroblasts, as well as by the presence of key centromere binding proteins CENP-E, CENP-F, and INCENP. These results indicate that in addition to CENP-A, CENP-C, and CENP-E described in earlier studies, neocentromere activity can further be defined by CENP-F and INCENP binding. Our evidence suggests that neocentromere formation constitutes a viable mechanism for the mitotic stabilisation of acentric ring chromosomes. ( info)

17/404. in vitro and in vivo responses to short-term recombinant human insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-I) in a severely growth-retarded girl with ring chromosome 15 and deletion of a single allele for the type 1 IGF receptor gene.

    OBJECTIVES: patients with single allele defects in the gene encoding the type 1 IGF receptor have been reported to have growth failure, but fibroblasts from affected patients have not exhibited insensitivity to the effects of IGF-I in vitro. The in vitro and in vivo responses to short-term recombinant human IGF-I (rhIGF-I) in a severely growth-retarded girl with ring chromosome 15 and deletion of a single allele for the type 1 IGF receptor gene have been investigated. DESIGN AND PATIENT: The child exhibited prenatal and severe post-natal growth failure, and delayed psychomotor development. Southern blotting revealed a 50% reduction in IGF-I receptor DNA, and in an RNase protection assay (RPA), a quantitatively similar reduction in steady-state mRNA for type 1 IGF receptor. rhIGF-I was administered in graded doses of 40, 60 and 80 microg/kg twice daily by subcutaneous injection for periods of 2-2.5 days each. RESULTS: During rhIGF-I treatment, mean urinary nitrogen excretion was unchanged and urinary calcium rose to 60% greater than in the pre-treatment period. rhIGF-I injections produced only a modest decrease in indices of GH secretion, assessed by frequent (every 20 min) sampling over periods of 12 h. There was no significant difference between the mean GH concentrations during rhIGF-I treatment (5.32 /- 6.2 mU/l) compared with that before rhIGF-I treatment (8.46 /- 10.2 mU/l). Mean IGFBP-3-values were increased (4.5 mg/l before vs. 5.4 mg/l during rhIGF-I). TSH values after injection of TRH were not significantly reduced by IGF-I (mean of all values, 18.6 mU/l vs. 15.5 mU/l during rhIGF-I treatment). in vitro binding of radiolabelled IGF-I to the patient's fibroblasts was less than that bound by control fibroblasts (patient, 0.69% binding by 248 000 cells, vs. 1.41% binding by 260 000 fibroblasts from an age-matched control). However, the patient's fibroblasts exhibited a growth response in vitro to the addition of IGF-I in a fashion similar to that of control fibroblasts. CONCLUSIONS: These studies show evidence in each of the indices examined of in vivo resistance to IGF-I and suggest that the growth retardation observed in such patients may be the direct result of the absence of one of the alleles encoding the type 1 IGF receptor. ( info)

18/404. Clinical, cytogenetic, and fluorescence in situ hybridization findings in two cases of "complete ring" syndrome.

    The term "ring syndrome" was proposed to describe a phenotype of growth failure without major malformations due to a ring autosome. The growth failure is thought to be caused by instability of the ring chromosome leading to aneusomy and cell death. Most previous studies of ring chromosomes were based on standard cytogenetic banding techniques and were limited to microscopically detectable deletions in the ring chromosomes. We report on two patients with complete ring (4) and ring (9) chromosomes, respectively. The first was a 15-month-old girl and the second was a 16-month-old boy. They both presented with severe, symmetrical growth failure and normal psychomotor development in the absence of malformations. Their parents had a normal phenotype. The first case had a whorled pattern of hyperpigmentation and hypopigmentation on part of the face and chest, and the second case had a patchy hyperpigmented rash on the trunk. Peripheral blood karyotype of the first patient was 46,XX, r(4)(p16.3q35.2) and of the second 45,XY,-9/46,XY,r(9)(p24q34.3). G-band analysis suggested no loss of material in the ring chromosomes. These findings were confirmed by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis using chromosome-specific subtelomeric probes. The common human telomeric sequences were intact in the first patient but absent in the second patient. The cytogenetic and FISH data in our two cases provide further evidence for the existence of a "complete ring" phenotype independent of the autosome involved. Pigmentary skin changes are a useful clinical sign of mosaicism caused by the ring instability. ( info)

19/404. Ring chromosome 8 syndrome: further characterization.

    We describe two de novo cases of extra r(8) confirmed by fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH). Based on these two and eight additional cases of extra r(8) confirmed by FISH, the phenotype is better documented. One of our patients had minor facial anomalies, near-normal growth, and neurological development. She had a ring in each cell analyzed. The second had minor craniofacial anomalies and growth and mental retardation. He had a small or double-sized ring in each cell. The phenotype of these 10 cases ranges from almost normal in an adult with 10% mosaicism to variable degrees of minor anomalies, growth retardation, and mental retardation overlapping the mosaic 8 syndrome. ( info)

20/404. Deletion (1)(q12) and double minutes in a metastatic adenocarcinoma of the prostate.

    cytogenetic analysis after short-term cultures were performed on an invasive and moderately-differentiated prostatic adenocarcinoma. The results showed a normal male chromosomal complement in most metaphases examined. Furthermore, several abnormalities were found, including del(1)(q12), double minute and ring chromosomes, acentric fragments, triradial figures, and near-tetraploid cells. ( info)
<- Previous || Next ->


Leave a message about 'Ring Chromosomes'


We do not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content in this site. Click here for the full disclaimer.