34 resultados para monosomy
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A 1-year-old child with clinical features of monosomy 14 is reported. She has dysmorphic facial features including ocular colobomata, dolichocephaly and microcephaly, retinal pigmentation, severe seizures, fair curly hair and tapering fingers. There was severe mental retardation. This is the first reported case of severe mosaic monosomy 14, with up to 30% mosaicism. A recognizable facial gestalt is present in children with 14q deletions or partial monosomy 14, as well as susceptibility to infection, feeding difficulties, seizures and retinal pigmentation. (C) 2004 Lippincott Williams Wilkins.
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This report describes the case of an 8-month-old infant with a diagnosis of juvenile myelomonocytic leukemia (JMML) and type I neurofibromatosis that presented progression to B lineage acute lymphoid leukemia (ALL). The same rearrangement of gene T-cell receptor gamma (TCRgamma) was detected upon diagnosis of JMML and ALL, suggesting that both neoplasias may have evolved from the same clone. Our results support the theory that JMML may derive from pluripotential cells and that the occurrence of monosomy of chromosome 7 within a clone of cells having an aberrant neurofibromatosis type 1 (NFI) gene may be the cause of JMML and acute leukemia. (C) 2002 Elsevier B.V. Ltd. All rights reserved.
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We describe a case of X monosomy associated with a maternally inherited t(13;14) Robertsonian translocation in a girl with Turner syndrome. The girl's X chromosome was demonstrated to be maternally inherited, ruling out the hypothesis that the translocation exerted an interchromosomal effect on the origin of the monosomy. Chromosomes 13 and 14 showed biparental inheritance.
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Short-term cultures of a collagenase disaggregated ameloblastoma previously diagnosed as an adenoid cystic carcinoma of the salivary gland were shown by cytogenetic analysis to have the clonal karyotype 45,XY,del(10)(p12), -22. The data may indicate that the loss of genes of chromosome 22, as well as of 10p, could be a critical event in the evolutionary pattern of odontogenic neoplasias. (C) Elsevier B.V., 1996
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Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior (CAPES)
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Monosomy 1p36 results from heterozygous deletions of the terminal short chromosome 1 arm, the most common terminal deletion in humans. The microdeletion is split in two usually non-overlapping and clinically distinct classical distal and proximal 1p36 monosomy syndromes. Using comparative genome hybridization, MLPA and qPCR we identified the largest contiguous ∼16 Mb terminal 1p36 deletion reported to date. It covers both distal and proximal regions, causes a neonatally lethal variant with virtually exclusive features of distal 1p36 monosomy, highlighting the key importance of the gene-rich distal region for the "compound" 1p36 phenotype and a threshold deletion-size effect for haplo-lethality.
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Se caracterizan las malformaciones renales y urinarias (MRU), y cardiovasculares (CV), así como la función renal (FR) y la presión arterial (PA) en pacientes con Sindrome de Turner (ST) mediante un estudio retrospectivo entre 1999 y 2009 en Bogotá. Se encontró 10 pacientes con algún grado de insuficiencia renal crónica (IRC). Además 4 pacientes presentaron prehipertensión arterial, y 5 (HTA); en ellos se encontró hidronefrosis y riñón poliquístico. Las MRU más frecuentes fueron únicas; en ellas las mayores alteraciones cromosómicas son la monosomía y el mosaicismo. La mayor malformación CV fué la válvula aórtica bicúspide. El ST amerita seguimiento de FR y PA para prevenir complicaciones a largo plazo por IRC e HTA.
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El cáncer de mama en Colombia, es la tercera causa de muerte en la población en general y la segunda en mujeres. En el año 2002 el 40.5% de los casos se presentaron en mujeres menores de 50 años (Pardo, et al. 2003). El cáncer de mama resulta de múltiples factores, entre los que se incluyen cambios sucesivos en el genoma de células epiteliales originalmente normales, que pueden conducir a la activación de oncogenes, inactivación de genes supresores de tumor y pérdida de función de genes reparadores de daños al ADN. Estas alteraciones pueden también ser producto de anomalías cromosómicas tales como monosomías, trisomías, translocaciones, inversiones, pérdida de material genético y amplificaciones que también afectan la expresión de genes (1) (2) (3) (4). Sin embargo, el orden de aparición de los diferentes eventos no está completamente dilucidado. En este estudio se determinaron las anomalías cromosómicas y secuencias de ADN amplificadas en pacientes con cáncer de mama, tanto en muestras de sangre periférica como de tumor de mama de 30 pacientes. En las dos líneas celulares analizadas se observó una alta frecuencia de monosomías principalmente de los cromosomas X, 6, 7, 9, 17, 19 y 22. Hay una asociación entre las monosomías de los cromosomas 17 y 22 con el estado negativo para los receptores de estrógenos y progestágenos (p=0.027, p=0.050). También se encontró asociación entre la monosomía del cromosoma 19 con edad avanzada (p=0.034), observándose formas más agresivas de la enfermedad cuando ésta estuvo presente. Las monosomías fueron características de carcinomas ductales infiltrantes de todos los grados. En los demás tipos de carcinoma su frecuencia fue más baja. En el presente estudio se encontró una asociación significativa entre algunas anomalías cromosómicas y la enfermedad, no reportadas anteriormente, como fueron algunas monosomías, fragilidades y roturas cromosómicas y cromatídicas. La alta frecuencia de fragilidades encontradas tanto en sangre periférica (fra 9q12 p=0.001 y fra 3p14 p= 0.38) como de fragilidades expresadas espontáneamente (no inducidas por el uso de reactivos específicos) en muestras de tumor de mama (fra 1p11 p= 0.001, fra 2q11 p= 0.002), pueden ser el reflejo de una alta inestabilidad cromosómica en el genoma de estos pacientes, mostrando lautilidad de los estudios de fragilidad en la determinación de individuos en alto riesgo de desarrollar cáncer de mama. En ensayos de FISH no se observaron amplificaciones de los genes ERBb2 y c-myc en los pacientes analizados. Esto concuerda con lo encontrado en la literatura en donde se ha reportado, para este tipo de tumores, una sobre expresión de la proteína sin amplificación del gen, explicada por desregulación de la expresión del gen, a su vez posiblemente debida a mutaciones en la región promotora o a alteraciones, que conducen a un aumento de la tasa de transcripción (5) (6) (7). Los resultados obtenidos, aunque preliminares, aportan nuevos marcadores cromosómicos que pueden orientar el diagnóstico, pronóstico y tratamiento de esta patología.
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Purpose: Genetic biomarkers of head and neck tumors could be useful for distinguishing among patients with similar clinical and histopathologic characteristics but having differential probabilities of survival. The purpose of this study was to investigate chromosomal alterations in head and neck carcinomas and to correlate the results with clinical and epidentiologic variables.Experimental Design: Cytogenetic analysis of short-term cultures from 64 primary untreated head and neck squamous cell carcinomas was used to determine the overall pattern of chromosome aberrations. A representative subset of tumors was analyzed in detail by spectral karyotyping and/or confirmatory fluorescence in situ hybridization analysis.Results: Recurrent losses of chromosomes Y (26 cases) and 19 (14 cases), and gains of chromosomes 22 (23 cases), 8 and 20 (11 cases each) were observed. The most frequent structural aberration was del(22)(q13.1) followed by rearrangements involving 6q and 12p. The presence of specific cytogenetic aberrations was found to correlate significantly with an unfavorable outcome. There was a significant association between survival and gains in chromosomes 10 (P = 0.008) and 20 (P = 0.002) and losses of chromosomes 15 (P = 0.005) and 22 (P = 0.021). Univariate analysis indicated that acquisition of monosomy 17 was a significant (P = 0.0012) factor for patients with a previous family history of cancer.Conclusions: the significant associations found in this study emphasize that alterations of distinct regions of the genome may be genetic biomarkers for a poor prognosis. Losses of chromosomes 17 and 22 can be associated with a family history of cancer.
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Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)
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Benign and malignant thyroid tumors constitute a wide range of neoplasias showing recurrent chromosome abnormalities. In an attempt to characterize specific numerical chromosome abnormalities in thyroid tissues, We present here the findings from a study of archival samples depicted by 10 malignant tumors, 30 benign lesions, and 10 normal thyroid tissues. Fluorescence in situ hybridization was performed on noncultured samples using biotinylated centromere-specific probes for chromosomes 7, 10, and 17. Trisomy or tetrasomy 7 were present in 19 benign and in 7 malignant tumors. Trisomy 10 or 17 were observed in 18 adenomas or goiters and in 9 carcinomas, and monosomy 17 was seen in 2 carcinomas. Our findings suggest that such abnormalities are an in vivo phenomenon and may be important in the neoplastic proliferation of thyroid gland. (C) Elsevier B.V., 2000. All rights reserved.
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After in vitro culture, we analyzed cytogenetically four acoustic nerve neurinomas, one intraspinal neurinoma and one neurofibroma obtained from unrelated patients. Monosomy of chromosomes 22 and 16 was an abnormality common to all cases, followed in frequency by loss of chromosomes 18 (three cases) and chromosomes 8, 17 and 19 (two cases). Trisomy of chromosome 20 was also detected in two cases. Structural rearrangements were detected at low frequencies, with del(10)(p12) being present in two cases. In addition, we observed cell subpopulations showing a certain degree of genetic instability, reflected by the presence of polyploid cells with inconsistent abnormalities, endoreduplications and telomeric associations resulting in dicentric chromosomes. It is probable that these cytogenetic abnormalities represent some kind of evolutionary advantage for the in vitro progression of nerve sheath tumors.
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Patients with chagasic achalasia (megaesophagus) are liable to have an additional 1.7-20% possibility of developing esophageal squamous cell carcinoma (ESCC). We applied a fluorescence in situ hybridization technique in 20 such patients and found aneuploidies of chromosomes 7, 11, and 17 in 60% (12 of 20 specimens) and deletion of the TP53 gene in 54.5% (6 of 11 specimens; it was only possible to obtain data by FISH technique from 11 of the 20 achalasia patients). The main aneuploidies detected were chromosome 7 monosomy or trisomy (35%) in mid-third megaesophagus cases, and chromosome 17 monosomy or trisomy (25%) in distal-third cases. TP53 gene deletion was more frequent in mid-third (62.5%) than in distal-third megaesophagus cases (40%). In chagasic megaesophagus, no amplification of the cyclin D1 gene (CCND1) was observed. Comparing chagasic megaesophagus to ESCC, we found a higher frequency of aneuploidies in all 10 tumors. The main alterations were trisomy or tetrasomy of chromosomes 17 (90%), 11 (70%), and 7 (70%). Amplification of CCND1 was evidenced as a cluster in 70% of the tumors (22-99% of nuclei), while TP53 gene deletion occurred in 100%. To our knowledge, this is the first cytogenetic analysis of chagasic megaesophagus to show that aneuploidies of chromosomes 7, 11, and 17, and TP53 gene deletion might be related to increased risk for malignancy. (C) 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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A cytogenetic study of 22 mares with fertility has showed that four of them had 63,X/64,XX mosaicism. The X-chromosome has presented the expected interstitial heterochromatic C - banding located in the long arm, besides of the usual centromeric band. The great variation of clinic signs observed in mares with mosaicism, could be due to the type of zygote or the time the mosaicism occured.
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An interstitial deletion of 7q21 was found in a boy with mental retardation, microcephaly, convergent strabismus, micrognathia, genital anomalies, and other findings, including ectrodactyly.