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Silver–Russell syndrome without body asymmetry in three patients with duplications of maternally derived chromosome 11p15 involving CDKN1C
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نویسنده
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Nakashima Shinichi ,Kato Fumiko ,Kosho Tomoki ,Nagasaki Keisuke ,Kikuchi Toru ,Kagami Masayo ,Fukami Maki ,Ogata Tsutomu
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منبع
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journal of human genetics - 2015 - دوره : 60 - شماره : 2 - صفحه:91 -95
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چکیده
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We report duplications of maternally derived chromosome 11p15 involving cdkn1c encoding a negative regulator for cell proliferation in three japanese patients (cases 1 and 2 from family a and case 3 from family b) with silver–russell syndrome (srs) phenotype lacking hemihypotrophy. chromosome analysis showed 46,xx,der(16)t(11;16)(p15.3;q24.3)mat in case 1, 46,xy,der(16)t(11;16)(p15.3;q24.3)mat in case 2 and a de novo 46,xx,der(17)t(11;17)(p15.4;q25.3) in case 3. genomewide oligonucleotide-based array comparative genomic hybridization, microsatellite analysis, pyrosequencing-based methylation analysis and direct sequence analysis revealed the presence of maternally derived extra copies of the distal chromosome 11p involving the wild-type cdkn1c (a ~7.98 mb region in cases 1 and 2 and a ~4.43 mb region in case 3). the results, in conjunction with the previous findings in patients with similar duplications encompassing cdkn1c and in those with intragenic mutations of cdkn1c, imply that duplications of cdkn1c, as well as relatively mild gain-of-function mutations of cdkn1c lead to srs subtype that usually lack hemihypotrophy.
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آدرس
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Hamamatsu University School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Japan, Hamamatsu University School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Japan, Shinshu University School of Medicine, Department of Human Genetics, Japan, Niigata University School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Japan, Saitama Medical University, Department of Pediatrics, Japan, National Research Institute for Child Health and Development, Department of Molecular Endocrinology, Japan, National Research Institute for Child Health and Development, Department of Molecular Endocrinology, Japan, Hamamatsu University School of Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, Japan
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Authors
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