The association of Angelman's syndrome with deletions within 15q11-13
- PMID: 2918545
- PMCID: PMC1015553
- DOI: 10.1136/jmg.26.2.73
The association of Angelman's syndrome with deletions within 15q11-13
Abstract
The inheritance of Angelman's syndrome, a disorder characterised by mental retardation, epilepsy, ataxia, and a happy disposition, is debated because affected sibs occur less frequently than expected with autosomal recessive inheritance. After discovering two unrelated patients with a small deletion of the proximal long arm of chromosome 15, 10 further patients with Angelman's syndrome were reassessed. Five had apparently normal karyotypes, four had a deletion within 15q11-13, and one had a pericentric inversion, inv(15)(p11q13) involving the same chromosomal region. In the latter case, the healthy mother had the same pericentric inversion, indicating that the patient also had a submicroscopic mutation on his other chromosome 15. These data map the Angelman locus to 15q11-13 and suggest that de novo visible deletions (associated with a low recurrence risk) and autosomal recessively inherited cases combine to give an overall sib recurrence risk of less than 25%.
Comment in
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Angelman's syndrome, abnormality of 15q11-13, and imprinting.J Med Genet. 1990 Feb;27(2):141. doi: 10.1136/jmg.27.2.141. J Med Genet. 1990. PMID: 2319586 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
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Angelman's syndrome and 15q11-13 deletions.J Med Genet. 1989 Aug;26(8):538. doi: 10.1136/jmg.26.8.538. J Med Genet. 1989. PMID: 2769727 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
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