Roberto Ciccone

Roberto Ciccone
University of Pavia | UNIPV · Department of Molecular Medicine

PhD

About

82
Publications
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Introduction
Roberto Ciccone currently works at the Department of Molecular Medicine, University of Pavia. Roberto does research in Molecular Biology and Genetics. Their current project is 'chromosome rearrangements'.
Additional affiliations
January 2009 - April 2015
University of Pavia
Position
  • Researcher

Publications

Publications (82)
Article
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Significance We report the discovery of complete human interleukin-1 receptor (IL-1R)-associated kinase 1 (IRAK-1) deficiency resulting from a de novo Xq28 microdeletion encompassing MECP2 and IRAK1 in a boy. Like many boys with MECP2 defects, this patient died very early. IRAK-1 is a component of the Toll-like receptor (TLR)/IL-1R (TIR) signaling...
Article
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The diagnosis of VACTERL syndrome can be elusive especially in the prenatal life, due to the presence of malformations that overlap those present in other genetic conditions, including the Fanconi anemia. We report on three VACTERL cases within two families, where the two who arrived to be born died shortly after birth due to severe organs' malform...
Article
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The pathogenesis of cerebral small-vessel disease (SVD) is still incompletely understood, although evidence from family and twin studies supports the hypothesis that genetic factors may contribute to SVD pathogenesis. Identification of genetic susceptibility factors for SVD may improve our knowledge on SVD pathogenesis. SVE-LA (Small Vessel and Lac...
Article
COL4A1 is located in humans on chromosome13q34 and it encodes the alpha 1 chain of type IV collagen, a component of basal membrane. It is expressed mainly in the brain, muscles, kidneys and eyes. Different COL4A1 mutations have been reported in many patients who present a very wide spectrum of clinical symptoms. They typically show a multisystemic...
Article
NSD1 point mutations, submicroscopic deletions and intragenic deletions are the major cause of Sotos syndrome, characterized by pre-postnatal generalized overgrowth with advanced bone age, learning disability, seizures, distinctive facial phenotype. Reverse clinical phenotype due to 5q35 microduplication encompassing NSD1 gene has been reported so...
Article
We analyzed by next-generation sequencing (NGS) 67 epilepsy genes in 19 patients with different types of either isolated or syndromic epileptic disorders and in 15 controls to investigate whether a quick and cheap molecular diagnosis could be provided. The average number of nonsynonymous and splice site mutations per subject was similar in the two...
Article
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To the Editor: Beuschlein et al. report a gain of function in PRKACA, the catalytic subunit alpha (Cα) of the cyclic AMP (cAMP)-dependent protein kinase (protein kinase A [PKA]) in cortisol-producing adenomas and micronodular adrenocortical hyperplasia.(1) Micronodular adrenocortical hyperplasia is also associated with Carney complex and inactivati...
Article
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Xq28 duplications, including MECP2 (methyl CpG-binding protein 2; OMIM 300005), have been identified in approximately 140 male patients presenting with hypotonia, severe developmental delay/intellectual disability, limited or absent speech and ambulation, and recurrent respiratory infections. Female patients with Xq28 duplication have been rarely r...
Article
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Rare copy number variants (CNVs) disrupting ASTN2 or both ASTN2 and TRIM32 have been reported at 9q33.1 by genome-wide studies in a few individuals with neurodevelopmental disorders. The vertebrate-specific astrotactins, ASTN2 and its paralog ASTN1, have key roles in glial-guided neuronal migration during brain development. To determine the prevale...
Article
We present a patient affected by Dravet syndrome. Thorough analysis of genes that might be involved in the pathogenesis of such phenotype with both conventional and next generation sequencing resulted negative, therefore she was investigated by a-GCH that showed the presence of an unbalanced translocation resulting in a der(4)t(4;8)(p16.3,p23.3). T...
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We report a girl with a de novo distal deletion of 9p affected by idiopathic central precocious puberty and intellectual disability. Genome-wide array-CGH revealed a terminal deletion of about 11 Mb, allowing to define her karyotype as 46; XX, del(9)(p23-pter). To our knowledge, this is the second reported case of precocious puberty associated with...
Article
Mutations and deletions in the STXBP1 gene are associated with Early Onset Epileptic Encephalopathy (EOEE). We describe the case of an infant with neonatal encephalopathy without epileptic seizures and an EEG pattern ranging from severely discontinuous to suppression burst, followed by West Syndrome with hypsarrythmia and spasms at 2 months. An arr...
Article
Chromosome 5p13 duplication syndrome (MIM #613174), a contiguous gene syndrome involving duplication of several genes on chromosome 5p13 including NIPBL (OMIM 608667), has been described in rare patients with developmental delay and learning disability, behavioral problems and peculiar facial dysmorphisms. 5p13 duplications described so far present...
Article
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A precise guideline establishing chromosomal microarray analysis (CMA) applications and platforms in the prenatal setting does not exist. The controversial question is whether CMA technologies can or should soon replace standard karyotyping in prenatal diagnostic practice. A review of the recent literature and survey of the knowledge and experience...
Article
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Developmental delay/intellectual disabilities, speech disturbance, pre- and postnatal growth retardation, microcephaly, signs of ectodermal dysplasia, and genital malformations in males (hypospadias) represent the phenotypic core of the recent emerging 19q13.11 deletion syndrome. Using array-CGH for genome-wide screening we detected an interstitial...
Article
Unlabelled: We report two individuals with developmental delay and dysmorphic features, in whom array-based comparative genomic hybridization (array CGH) led to the identification of a 2p15p16.1 de novo deletion. In the first patient (Patient 1) a familial deletion of 6q12, inherited from her father, was also detected. In the second patient (Patie...
Article
Rare intrachromosomal triplications producing partial tetrasomies have been reported for a number of chromosomes. A detailed molecular characterization, necessary to define the mechanism of their formation, has so far been lacking. We report on the detailed clinical, cytogenetic, and molecular characterization of two triplications, one de novo invo...
Data
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Molecular characterisation of the ring 22-associated deletion in subject P26. A, Whole chromosome view (left) and detail (right) of array-CGH analysis using a 180k Agilent kit microarray. B, Inverse-PCR amplification and direct sequencing of the amplified fragments revealed the breakpoint junction. Repetitive sequences are shown in lowercase letter...
Data
Molecular characterisation of the 22q13.2 terminal translocations in subjects P11, P15/P16. A, details of the of array-CGH analysis using an oligonucleotide-based a 44k Agilent kit microarray showing the breakpoint regions on chromosome 22q (left) and 12q (right) in case P11. B, Long-range PCR amplification and direct sequencing of the breakpoint j...
Data
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Primers used for breakpoint cloning. Primer names, sequences and amplification methods are indicated. Nested PCR primers are indicated as F2, R2, F3, R3. (PDF)
Data
Photographs of adult patients. Top, Subject P30 at the age of 9 months (A), 13 months (B), 4 years (C); 8 years (D) and 35 years (E). No significant craniofacial dysmorphisms can be noticed, except for pointed chin (A,B,D), wide nasal bridge (A,C), bulbous nose (C,D,E). Middle, Subject P10 at the age of 12 years (I) and at the age of 40 years; fron...
Data
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Molecular characterisation of ring chromosome 22 in subject P28. Whole chromosome 22 view (left) and details (right) of a 180k Agilent array-CGH profile showing the 18 Mb duplication at 22q11–12.3, the 4.2 Mb duplication at 22q12.3–13.2 and the distal 240 kb deletion at 22q13.3. (PDF)
Data
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Sequences of all breakpoint junctions of terminal and interstitial 22q13.3 deletions. The location of all sequences on the hg18 Human Genome sequence is indicated. Repetitive sequences are shown in lowercase letters. The identity of all repetitive sequences is indicated in the Repeats column. Telomere repeat sequences are shown in red. Genomic sequ...
Data
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Molecular characterisation of the 22q13.2 terminal deletion in subject P12. A, Whole chromosome view and B, detail of array-CGH analysis using an oligonucleotide-based custom 22q13 microarray. Arrowheads delimit two mosaic deleted regions: the BP1–BP2 deletion region (from 44,606 kb to 45,600 kb) has an average log ratio of −0.8; the deleted region...
Data
Clinical features of PMS patients compared to the subjects in this study. (*) Prevalence according to Phelan, 2007 (Ref. [17]). (a) Accelerated growth was observed in 9 cases out of 29, including the two patients (P26, P27) with ring 22 for whom this information was available. In one patient (P25) with ring 22, growth was slightly delayed, while sh...
Data
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Supplementary Clinical Information. (PDF)
Article
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In this study, we used deletions at 22q13, which represent a substantial source of human pathology (Phelan/McDermid syndrome), as a model for investigating the molecular mechanisms of terminal deletions that are currently poorly understood. We characterized at the molecular level the genomic rearrangement in 44 unrelated patients with 22q13 monosom...
Article
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SOX9 is a widely expressed transcription factor playing several relevant functions during development and essential for testes differentiation. It is considered to be the direct target gene of the protein encoded by SRY and its overexpression in an XX murine gonad can lead to male development in the absence of Sry. Recently, a family was reported w...
Article
Partial trisomy 16 is rare and most of the reported cases are secondary to chromosome rearrangements resulting in concurrent monosomies or trisomies of a second chromosome. Only a few patients survive the neonatal period and the duplication of the long arm seems to be mainly responsible for the prenatal lethality of the full trisomy 16. The reporte...
Article
Iascone M, Ciccone R, Galletti L, Marchetti D, Seddio F, Lincesso AR, Pezzoli L, Vetro A, Barachetti D, Boni L, Federici D, Soto AM, Comas JV, Ferrazzi P, Zuffardi O. Identification of de novo mutations and rare variants in hypoplastic left heart syndrome. Hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS) is one of the most severe congenital heart malformatio...
Article
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The genomic architecture of the 10q22q23 region is characterised by two low-copy repeats (LCRs3 and 4), and deletions in this region appear to be rare. We report the clinical and molecular characterisation of eight novel deletions and six duplications within the 10q22.3q23.3 region. Five deletions and three duplications occur between LCRs3 and 4, w...
Article
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Genome-wide high-resolution array analysis is rapidly becoming a reliable method of diagnostic investigation in individuals with mental retardation and congenital anomalies, leading to the identification of several novel microdeletion and microduplication syndromes. We have identified seven individuals with duplication on chromosome 14q11.2q13.1, w...
Article
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By array-CGH, we identified a cryptic deletion of about 3.4 Mb involving the chromosomal region 11q13.2q13.4 in a child with speech and developmental delay. Highly homologous segmental duplications related to the well-known olfactory receptor (OR)-containing clusters at 8p and 4p are located at the breakpoints of the imbalance and may be involved i...
Article
The Peutz-Jeghers Syndrome (PJS) is an autosomal dominant polyposis disorder with increased risk of multiple cancers. STK11/LKB1 (hereafter named STK11) germline mutations account for the large majority of PJS cases whereas large deletions account for about 30% of the cases. We report here the first thorough molecular characterization of 15 large d...
Article
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Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome (RSTS) is a rare autosomal dominant disorder characterised by facial dysmorphisms, growth and psychomotor development delay, and skeletal defects. The known genetic causes are point mutations or deletions of the CREBBP (50-60%) and EP300 (5%) genes. To detect chromosomal rearrangements indicating novel positional candidate...
Article
The constitutional deletion of 22q13 is an example of a new microdeletion syndrome, known as the 22q13.3 deletion syndrome, telomeric 22q13 monosomy syndrome, or Phelan-McDermid syndrome (OMIM #606232).It was identified by the detection of a cytogenetic rearrangement in advance of its clinical definition. The clinical definition came following the...
Article
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Deletion of chromosome 9p21 is a crucial event for the development of several cancers including acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL). Double strand breaks (DSBs) triggering 9p21 deletions in ALL have been reported to occur at a few defined sites by illegitimate action of the V(D)J recombination activating protein complex. We have cloned 23 breakpoint...
Article
The alpha-synuclein gene (SNCA) multiplication causes autosomal dominant Parkinson Disease (PD): triplication is associated with early-onset rapidly progressing parkinsonism with a strong likelihood of developing dementia, while duplication is associated with a less severe phenotype similar to idiopathic PD. We tested for SNCA multiplication 144 un...
Article
Molecular techniques led to the discovery that several chromosome rearrangements interpreted as terminal duplications were in fact inverted duplications contiguous to terminal deletions. Inv dup del rearrangements originate through a symmetric dicentric chromosome that, after asymmetric breakage, generates an inv dup del and a deleted chromosome. I...
Article
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Medullary sponge kidney (MSK) is a rare congenital disease characterized by diffuse ectasia or dilation of precalyceal collecting tubules. Although its pathogenesis is unknown, the association with various congenital diseases suggests that it could be a developmental disorder. In addition to the typical clinical features of nephrocalcinosis and uro...
Article
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The commonest pathogenic DMD changes are intragenic deletions/duplications which make up to 78% of all cases and point mutations (roughly 20%) detectable through direct sequencing. The remaining mutations (about 2%) are thought to be pure intronic rearrangements/mutations or 5'-3' UTR changes. In order to screen the huge DMD gene for all types of c...
Article
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Most patients with an interstitial deletion of 6q16 have Prader-Willi-like phenotype, featuring obesity, hypotonia, short hands and feet, and developmental delay. In all reported studies, the chromosome rearrangement was detected by karyotype analysis, which provides an overview of the entire genome but has limited resolution. Here we describe a de...
Article
Background: The commonest pathogenic DMD changes are intragenic deletions/duplications which make up to 78% of all cases and point mutations (roughly 20%) detectable through direct sequencing. The remaining mutations (about 2%) are thought to be pure intronic rearrangements/mutations or 5'-3' UTR changes. In order to screen the huge DMD gene for al...
Article
Full-text available
Xq28 duplications encompassing MECP2 have been described in male patients with a severe neurodevelopmental disorder associated with hypotonia and spasticity, severe learning disability and recurrent pneumonia. We identified an Xq28 duplication in three families where several male patients had presented with intestinal pseudo-obstruction or bladder...
Article
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The chromosome 17q21.31 microdeletion syndrome is a novel genomic disorder that has originally been identified using high resolution genome analyses in patients with unexplained mental retardation. We report the molecular and/or clinical characterisation of 22 individuals with the 17q21.31 microdeletion syndrome. We estimate the prevalence of the s...
Article
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We studied a family in which the same 10 Mb inverted duplication of 2p25.3-p25.1 segregates in two children and their father, all showing a trisomy phenotype. As FISH analysis demonstrated that the duplication was inverted, we suspected that a contiguous terminal deletion was also present, according to the classical inv dup del type of rearrangemen...
Article
We report on a child with mild mental retardation, hypotelorism, blepharophimosis, face slight asymmetry and partial hypoplasia of corpus callosum, with an interstitial deletion of a chromosome 15. The deletion was molecularly characterized by array-CGH and FISH techniques. This rearrangement has a 7.18Mb extension and maps to 15q21.2q22.1. To date...
Article
About 20% of cases with 7q deletion syndrome is associated with holoprosencephaly (HPE), due to deletion of the Sonic Hedgehog (SHH) gene (mapping to 7q36). The occurrence of severe forms of holoprosencephaly is higher in cases of 7q deletion associated with partial trisomies involving different parts of the genomes than in patients with pure 7q de...
Article
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It has been hypothesized that human clinical neocentromeres and evolutionary novel centromeres (ENC) represent two faces of the same phenomenon. However, there are only two reports of loci harboring both a novel centromere and a clinical neocentromere. We suggest that only the tip of the iceberg has been scratched because most neocentromerization e...
Article
An interstitial deletion of about 12Mb at 7q33-q36 was found in an adult female affected by autism and primary amenorrhea. Two genes, CNTNAP2 and NOBOX, both contained within the deletion region, have been recently associated with autism susceptibility and premature ovarian failure, respectively. Our findings reinforce the hypothesis that haploinsu...
Article
We identified a duplication of 22q13.1-q13.2 in a 10-year-old girl and demonstrated that this duplication was the recombinant product of a maternal intrachromosomal insertion. Phenotypic characteristics included prominent forehead, small low-set ears, hypertelorism, epicanthal folds, small palpebral fissures, short philtrum, and syndactyly. MRI of...
Article
Patients with a microscopically visible deletion of the distal part of the long arm of chromosome 1 have a recognisable phenotype, including mental retardation, microcephaly, growth retardation, a distinct facial appearance and various midline defects including corpus callosum abnormalities, cardiac, gastro-oesophageal and urogenital defects, as we...
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We report a patient with mild pachygyria, ascertained during a screening of subjects with abnormal neuronal migration and/or epilepsy, having a 7q11.23 duplication reciprocal to the Williams-Beuren critical region (WBCR) deletion. He exhibited speech delay and mental retardation together to type II trigonocephaly and other abnormalities. The proban...
Article
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We report a recurrent microdeletion syndrome causing mental retardation, epilepsy and variable facial and digital dysmorphisms. We describe nine affected individuals, including six probands: two with de novo deletions, two who inherited the deletion from an affected parent and two with unknown inheritance. The proximal breakpoint of the largest del...
Article
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Ring chromosomes are often associated with abnormal phenotypes because of loss of genomic material at one or both ends. In some cases no deletion has been detected and the abnormal phenotype has been attributed to mitotic ring instability. We investigated 33 different ring chromosomes in patients with phenotypic abnormalities by array based compara...
Article
We report the second instance of a complex unbalanced rearrangement consisting of distal trisomy 6p and 20q due to the concurrent transposition of distal 6p and 20q to the 22q telomere, previously described as a benign familial chromosomal variant. In the previous case, the nonpathogenicity of the rearrangement was based on the absence of genotypic...
Article
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Isolated growth hormone deficiency (IGHD) and multiple pituitary hormone deficiency (MPHD) are heterogeneous disorders with several different etiologies and they are responsible for most cases of short stature. Mutations in different genes have been identified but still many patients did not present mutations in any of the known genes. Chromosomal...
Article
Craniofrontonasal syndrome (CFNS [MIM 304110]) is an X-linked malformation syndrome characterized by craniofrontonasal dysplasia and extracranial manifestations in heterozygous females. In the majority of patients CFNS is caused by mutations in the EFNB1 gene (MIM 300035). We identified three girls with classical CFNS and mild developmental delay h...
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Using array comparative genome hybridisation (CGH) 41 de novo reciprocal translocations and 18 de novo complex chromosome rearrangements (CCRs) were screened. All cases had been interpreted as "balanced" by conventional cytogenetics. In all, 27 cases of reciprocal translocations were detected in patients with an abnormal phenotype, and after array...
Article
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Array-based whole genome investigation or molecular karyotyping enables the genome-wide detection of submicroscopic imbalances. Proof-of-principle experiments have demonstrated that molecular karyotyping outperforms conventional karyotyping with regard to detection of chromosomal imbalances. This article identifies areas for which the technology se...
Article
Recently the genotype/phenotype map of Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS) has been refined, using small 4p deletions covering or flanking the critical region in patients showing only some of the WHS malformations. Accordingly, prenatal-onset growth retardation and failure to thrive have been found to result from haploinsufficiency for a 4p gene located...
Article
We describe a new type of rearrangement consisting of the duplication of 8p23.1 and the triplication of 8p23.2 [dup trp(8p)] in two patients affected by mental retardation and minor facial dysmorphisms. Array-comparative genomic hybridization (CGH), fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH), and genotyping of polymorphic loci allowed us to demonstr...
Article
We report on a patient with mental and growth retardation, bilateral cleft lip and palate, hypertelorism, ptosis, hearing loss and mild epispadias, suggestive of Malpuech syndrome. High-resolution karyotype and microarray-CGH using an oligonucleotide array with 75Kb oligo's were normal, excluding Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome. Long-term follow-up reveal...
Article
The oculocerebrorenal syndrome of Lowe (OCRL) (MIM:309000) is an X-linked multisystemic disorder affecting the eyes, nervous system and kidneys due to mutations in OCRL1 gene. The gene contains 24 exons, and encodes a 105kDa phosphatydylinositol 4,5-biphosphate [PtdIns(4,5)P(2)] 5-phosphatase localized primarily in the trans-Golgi network and the l...
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Molecular definition at the BAC level of an 8p dicentric chromosome and an 8p deleted chromosome is reported in a patient with two different cell lines. The dicentric, which differed from that generating the recurrent inv dup del(8p) for the location of its break point, originated during the paternal meiosis on the background of the classical 8p23....
Article
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In mammals, X-linked gene products can be dosage compensated between males and females by inactivation of one of the two X chromosomes in the developing female embryos. X inactivation choice is usually random in embryo mammals, but several mechanisms can influence the choice determining skewed X inactivation. As a consequence, females heterozygous...
Chapter
A number of findings revealed that chromosome inversions are more frequent than deduced from classical cytogenetic studies. Indeed, some paracentric cryptic inversions have been found to be flanked by segmental duplications, either causing a Mendelian disease owing to the interruption of specific genes at inversion breakpoints or being present in t...
Article
We describe the characterization of an interstitial duplication of 12p, dup(12)(p11.21p13.31), by array-CGH and FISH in a patient with mental retardation and dysmorphic features. The sequence analysis of the breakpoints revealed the presence of homologous low copy repeats (LCRs) flanking the duplication region, thus suggesting that they have mediat...
Article
We report four cases of subjects with phenotypic abnormalities and mental retardation associated with apparently balanced translocations, two inherited and two de novo, which showed, by molecular analysis, a hidden complexity. All the cases have been analyzed with different molecular techniques, including array-CGH, and in two of them the transloca...
Article
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The best-known situation indissolubly linked to mosaicism is the uniparental disomy where a trisomic or monosomic zygote develops at least one cell line with 46 chromosomes. The mosaicism normal/abnormal cell lines may remain confined to placenta or persist in the embryo. Here, we describe a second situation that might also be indissolubly linked t...

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