Publication | Open Access
Familial translocation with partial trisomy of 13 and 22: evidence that specific regions of chromosomes 13 and 22 are responsible for the phenotype of each trisomy.
26
Citations
18
References
1977
Year
CytogeneticsGeneticsExtra ChromosomeMolecular GeneticsEpigeneticsClinical GeneticsMendelian DisorderFamilial TranslocationMaternal Balanced TranslocationChromosome 22Down SyndromeDerivative ChromosomeChromosomal RearrangementPartial TrisomyChromosomes 13Developmental AnomalyDevelopmental BiologyGenetic DisorderPediatricsChromosome BiologyMedicine
A newborn infant with clinical and pathological findings typical trisomy 13 and 22 syndromes had an extra chromosome which was a derivative chromosome from maternal balanced translocation affecting Nos. 13 and 22; 47,XY,+der(22),t(13:22)(q22:q12)Mat. The presence of extra specific euchromatic regions of No. 13(13q22 and/or 13q34) and No. 22 (22q11) seem to be responsible for the trisomy 13 and 22 syndromes.
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