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DELETION MAPPING OF CRITICAL REGION FOR HYPOSPADIAS, PENOSCROTAL TRANSPOSITION AND IMPERFORATE ANUS ON HUMAN CHROMOSOME 13.

Authors :
Garcia NM
Allgood J
Santos LJ
Lonergan D
Batanian JR
Henkemeyer M
Bartsch O
Schultz RA
Zinn AR
Baker LA
Source :
Journal of pediatric urology [J Pediatr Urol] 2006 Aug; Vol. 2 (4), pp. 233-242.
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The 13q-deletion syndrome causes human congenital birth defects due to the loss of regions of one long arm of human chromosome 13. A distal critical region for severe genitourinary and anorectal birth defects in the region of 13q32.2-34 has been suggested; we sought to narrow this critical region. METHODS: From patients with karyotypes revealing haploinsufficiency for distal chromosome 13q and their parents, peripheral blood was obtained and lymphocytes were immortalized for DNA isolation. Genetic and molecular cytogenetic methods were used to map deletions. Patient and parental samples were genotyped with a panel of 20 microsatellite markers spanning 13q31.3 qter and deletions identified by loss of heterozygosity. Deletions were also mapped using a panel of 35 BAC clones from the same region as probes for fluorescence in-situ hybridization on patient lymphoblastoid metaphase preparations. The data were synthesized and a deletion map defining the critical region was generated. RESULTS: Eight patients with known deletions around 13q32qter and their parents were analyzed, and categorized into three groups: three patients with anorectal and genitourinary anomalies (hypospadias, penoscrotal transposition), four male patients without anorectal and genitourinary anomalies, and one XY patient with ambiguous genitalia without anorectal anomalies. We mapped the critical region for anorectal and genitourinary anomalies to a approximately 9.5-Mb interval of 13q33.3-q34 delineated by markers D13S280-D13S285; this spans approximately 8% of the chromosome and contains 20 annotated genes CONCLUSION: The critical region of chromosome 13q mediating genitourinary/anorectal anomalies has been mapped, and will be narrowed by additional patients and further mapping. Identification of the gene(s) mediating these syndromic genitourinary defects should further our knowledge of molecular mediators of non-syndromic hypospadias, penoscrotal transposition and anorectal malformations.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1873-4898
Volume :
2
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of pediatric urology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
17476316
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpurol.2006.03.006