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Journal of Medical Genetics 2005;42:609-629; doi:10.1136/jmg.2004.026955
Copyright © 2005 by the BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.

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REVIEW

Directly transmitted unbalanced chromosome abnormalities and euchromatic variants

J C K Barber

Correspondence to:
Dr J C K Barber
Wessex Regional Genetics Laboratory, Salisbury District Hospital, Salisbury, Wiltshire SP2 8BJ, UK; john.barber{at}salisbury.nhs.uk] In total, 200 families were reviewed with directly transmitted, cytogenetically visible unbalanced chromosome abnormalities (UBCAs) or euchromatic variants (EVs). Both the 130 UBCA and 70 EV families were divided into three groups depending on the presence or absence of an abnormal phenotype in parents and offspring.

No detectable phenotypic effect was evident in 23/130 (18%) UBCA families ascertained mostly through prenatal diagnosis (group 1). In 30/130 (23%) families, the affected proband had the same UBCA as other phenotypically normal family members (group 2). In the remaining 77/130 (59%) families, UBCAs had consistently mild consequences (group 3).

In the 70 families with established EVs of 8p23.1, 9p12, 9q12, 15q11.2, and 16p11.2, no phenotypic effect was apparent in 38/70 (54%). The same EV was found in affected probands and phenotypically normal family members in 30/70 families (43%) (group 2), and an EV co-segregated with mild phenotypic anomalies in only 2/70 (3%) families (group 3). Recent evidence indicates that EVs involve copy number variation of common paralogous gene and pseudogene sequences that are polymorphic in the normal population and only become visible at the cytogenetic level when copy number is high.

The average size of the deletions and duplications in all three groups of UBCAs was close to 10 Mb, and these UBCAs and EVs form the "Chromosome Anomaly Collection" at http://www.ngrl.org.uk/Wessex/collection. The continuum of severity associated with UBCAs and the variability of the genome at the sub-cytogenetic level make further close collaboration between medical and laboratory staff essential to distinguish clinically silent variation from pathogenic rearrangement.


Abbreviations: CGH, comparative genomic hybridisation; CNV, copy number variation; DCR, Down’s syndrom critical region; EV, euchromatic variants; HAL, haploid autosomal length; PWACR, Prader-Willi critical region; TNDM, transient neonatal diabetes mellitus; UBCA, unbalanced chromosome abnormalities

Keywords: transmitted; unbalanced; euchromatic variant; copy number variation; web site




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