Maternal uniparental disomy 22 has no impact on the phenotype.
- 1 January 1994
- journal article
- Vol. 54 (1) , 21-4
Abstract
A 25-year-old normal healthy male was karyotyped because five of his wife's pregnancies terminated in spontaneous abortions at 6-14 wk of gestation. Cytogenetic investigation disclosed a de novo balanced Robertsonian t(22q;22q) translocation. Molecular studies revealed maternal only inheritance for chromosome 22 markers. Reduction to homozygosity for all informative markers indicates that the rearranged chromosome is an isochromosome derived from one of the maternal chromosomes 22. Except for the possibility of homozygosity for recessive mutations, maternal uniparental disomy 22 does not seem to have an adverse impact on the phenotype, apart from causing reproductive failure. It can be concluded that no maternally imprinted genes with major effect map to chromosome 22.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Normal phenotype with paternal uniparental isodisomy for chromosome 21.1993
- Maternal uniparental disomy for human chromosome 14, due to loss of a chromosome 14 from somatic cells with t(13;14) trisomy 14.1993
- Paternal uniparental disomy in a child with a balanced 15;15 translocation and Angelman syndromeAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics, 1993
- Somatic Mosaicism for Partial Paternal Isodisomy in Wiedemann-Beckwith Syndrome: A Post-Fertilization EventEuropean Journal of Human Genetics, 1993
- A second-generation linkage map of the human genomeNature, 1992
- Maternal uniparental isodisomy of chromosome 14: association with autosomal recessive rod monochromacy.1992
- Habitual abortion and translocation (22q;22q): unexpected transmission from a mother to her phenotypically normal daughterClinical Genetics, 1980
- Transmission of a balanced homologous t(22q;22q) translocation from mother to normal daughterClinical Genetics, 1980