Chromosome 2p15p16.1 microdeletion syndrome: 2.5 Mb deletion in a patient with renal anomalies, intractable seizures and a choledochal cyst.

Journal: European Journal Of Medical Genetics
Published:
Abstract

Chromosome 2p15p16.1 microdeletion is an emerging syndrome recently described in patients with dysmorphic facial features, congenital microcephaly, mild to moderate developmental delay and neurodevelopmental abnormalities. Using clinical ultra-high resolution Affymetrix SNP 6.0 array we identified a de novo interstitial deletion on the short arm of chromosome 2, spanning approximately 2.5 Mb in the cytogenetic band position 2p15p16.1, in a female infant with characteristic features of 2p15p16.1 deletion syndrome including severe developmental delay, congenital microcephaly, intractable epilepsy, and renal anomalies, as well as a congenital choledochal cyst which has not been previously reported in other patients with this cytogenetic defect. We further redefined the previously reported critical region, supporting the presence of a newly recognized microdeletion syndrome involving haploinsufficiency of one or more genes deleted within at least a 1.1 Mb segment of the 2p15p16.1 region.

Authors
Vishwanathan Hucthagowder, Ta-chiang Liu, Alex Paciorkowski, Liu Thio, Martin Keller, Christopher Anderson, Thomas Herman, Louis Dehner, Dorothy Grange, Shashikant Kulkarni