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Case Reports
. 1983;63(4):332-7.
doi: 10.1007/BF00274757.

Dicentric chromosome 13 and centromere inactivation

Case Reports

Dicentric chromosome 13 and centromere inactivation

S Schwartz et al. Hum Genet. 1983.

Abstract

The karyotype of a child with dysmorphic findings suggestive of both trisomy 13 and the 13q--syndrome was found to have cells with one of two different dicentric chromosomes: one bearing a duplication of chromosome 13q [46,XX,-13, + psu dic (13)t(13;13)(pter leads to cen leads to q34::q34 leads to pter)] and the other a deletion of 13q [46,XX,-13, + psu dic (13)t(13;13)(pter leads to cen leads to q22::q11 leads to pter]. Longitudinal cytogenetic studies in leukocytes demonstrated a loss of those cells possessing the small dicentric [psu dic(13)(q22;q11)], whereas fibroblasts from two separate skin biopsies contained only this marker. Q-band polymorphisms indicated that both dicentrics were of paternal origin, with the smaller dicentric derived from the larger via the bridge-breakage-fusion cycle. The presence of two active centromeres could not be confirmed in either dicentric.

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