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Case Reports
. 1984;38(4):298-307.
doi: 10.1159/000132078.

Random X inactivation resulting in mosaic nullisomy of region Xp21.1----p21.3 associated with heterozygosity for ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency and for chronic granulomatous disease

Case Reports

Random X inactivation resulting in mosaic nullisomy of region Xp21.1----p21.3 associated with heterozygosity for ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency and for chronic granulomatous disease

U Francke. Cytogenet Cell Genet. 1984.

Abstract

A young woman with normal gonadal development and mild mental retardation was found to have a small de novo interstitial deletion of most of band Xp21, karyotype designation 46,X,del(X) (pter----p21.3:: p21.1----qter). Replication studies on lymphocytes and skin fibroblasts revealed that in 45% of cells the normal X was late replicating. Somatic cell hybrids between her fibroblasts and HPRT-deficient Chinese hamster cells were obtained and selected for and against retention of the active human X chromosome. In several independent hybrids the deleted X was retained in the active state. Partial ornithine transcarbamylase (ornithine carbamoyltransferase EC 2.1.3.3) (OTC) deficiency was documented by elevated urinary orotic acid excretion and increased serum glutamine after a protein load. This confirms the mapping of the structural gene for OTC to this deletion. Testing of neutrophil function revealed heterozygosity for chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) suggesting that a gene for CGD maps within the deletion. Thus, X inactivation mosaicism is also present in hepatocytes and neutrophilic granulocytes. Random X inactivation in a female with an Xp deletion has not been previously reported. The cells from this patient and the somatic cell hybrids containing her deleted X chromosome in the absence of the normal X provide material for the precise mapping of X linked genes and DNA sequences on the short arm of the human X chromosome.

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