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Multiple Small Supernumerary Marker Chromosomes Resulting from Maternal Meiosis I or II Errors

Authors :
Martin Zenker
Martin Poot
Ewa Obersztyn
Claudia Gerloff
Ron Hochstenbach
Denny Schanze
Anna Kutkowska-Kaźmierczak
Beata Nowakowska
Amber Ummels
Ina Schanze
Marianne Volleth
Kamila Ziemkiewicz
Thomas Liehr
Petra Muschke
Source :
Molecular Syndromology, 6(5), 210. S. Karger AG
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
S. Karger AG, 2015.

Abstract

We present 2 cases with multiple de novo supernumerary marker chromosomes (sSMCs), each derived from a different chromosome. In a prenatal case, we found mosaicism for an sSMC(4), sSMC(6), sSMC(9), sSMC(14) and sSMC(22), while a postnatal case had an sSMC(4), sSMC(8) and an sSMC(11). SNP-marker segregation indicated that the sSMC(4) resulted from a maternal meiosis II error in the prenatal case. Segregation of short tandem repeat markers on the sSMC(8) was consistent with a maternal meiosis I error in the postnatal case. In the latter, a boy with developmental/psychomotor delay, autism, hyperactivity, speech delay, and hypotonia, the sSMC(8) was present at the highest frequency in blood. By comparison to other patients with a corresponding duplication, a minimal region of overlap for the phenotype was identified, with CHRNB3 and CHRNA6 as dosage-sensitive candidate genes. These genes encode subunits of nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs). We propose that overproduction of these subunits leads to perturbed component stoichiometries with dominant negative effects on the function of nAChRs, as was shown by others in vitro. With the limitation that in each case only one sSMC could be studied, our findings demonstrate that different meiotic errors lead to multiple sSMCs. We relate our findings to age-related aneuploidy in female meiosis and propose that predivision sister-chromatid separation during meiosis I or II, or both, may generate multiple sSMCs.

Details

ISSN :
16618777 and 16618769
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Syndromology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d87cc135c43c1c6436efa906ddbf4b59
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000441408