Publication | Open Access
Familial 1.3-Mb 11p15.5p15.4 Duplication in Three Generations Causing Silver-Russell and Beckwith-Wiedemann Syndromes
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Citations
17
References
2015
Year
Beckwith-wiedemann SyndromeDevelopmental AnomalyBeckwith-wiedemann SyndromesDevelopmental BiologySilver-russell SyndromeMendelian DisorderGenetic DisorderGeneticsPathologyFamilial 1.3-Mb 11P15.5p15.4Molecular GeneticsGenetic VariationDisease Gene IdentificationAbnormal DevelopmentMedicineEpigeneticsIcrs Cause SrsClinical Genetics
Silver-Russell syndrome (SRS) and Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) are 2 opposite growth-affecting disorders. The common molecular cause for both syndromes is an abnormal regulation of genes in chromosomal region 11p15, where 2 imprinting control regions (ICR) control fetal and postnatal growth. Also, many submicroscopic chromosomal disturbances like duplications in 11p15 have been described among SRS and BWS patients. Duplications involving both ICRs cause SRS or BWS, depending on which parent the aberration is inherited from. We describe to our knowledge the smallest familial pure 1.3-Mb duplication in chromosomal region 11p15.5p15.4 that involves both ICRs and is present in 3 generations causing an SRS or BWS phenotype.
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