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Totipotent stem cells bearing del(20q) maintain multipotential differentiation in Shwachman Diamond syndrome
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Citations
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References
2008
Year
GeneticsPathologyTotipotent Stem CellsMyeloid NeoplasiaHematological MalignancyBone Marrow FailureInterphase FluorescenceHematologyMultipotential DifferentiationShwachman Diamond SyndromeMolecular DiagnosticsStem CellsHealth SciencesDevelopmental GeneticsGene ExpressionCell BiologyChromatinCell LineageLineage PlasticityDevelopmental BiologyGenetic DisorderMalignant Blood DisorderStem Cell ResearchCell Fate DeterminationSbds/7q11 Gene MutationsMedicine
SBDS/7q11 gene mutations underlie the congenital Shwachman Diamond syndrome (SDS), characterized by bone marrow failure and high risk of haematological malignancies. In two cases of SDS with bone marrow failure and isolated del(20q) interphase fluorescence in situ hybridization (I-FISH) found no abnormalities in FHIT/3p14.2, IKZF1/7p13, D7S486/7q31, PTEN/10q23.3, WT1/11p13, ATM/11q23, D13S25/13q14, TP53/17p13, NF1/17q11, SMAD2/18q21, RUNX1/21q22. Fluorescence immunophenotype combined with I-FISH found del(20q) in a totipotent haematopoietic stem cell (CD34(+), CD133(+)) and downstream myelocyte (CD33(+), CD14(+), CD13(+)), erythrocyte (Glycophorin A(+)) and lymphocyte lineages (CD19(+), CD20(+), CD3(+), CD7(+)). These findings and clinical follow-ups confirm the benign course of SDS with isolated del(20q).
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