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Down Syndrome Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Down Syndrome, including details on education, symptoms, treatment, information.


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Recurrent trisomy 21: four cases in three generations.

Gair JL, Arbour L, Rupps R, Jiang R, Bruyère H, Robinson WP

Department of Medical Genetics, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.

Recurrent trisomy 21: four cases in three generations.While gonadal mosaicism can lead to recurrence of trisomy 21 (T21) for a single couple, the recurrence of free T21 in multiple members of a single pedigree has rarely been reported. We present an unusual pedigree with four cases of Down syndrome (DS) with free T21 were born to four separate women related through three generations of one family. The mothers were aged 18, 21, 29, and approximately 30 years at the time of the births. Using microsatellite markers, we excluded most of chromosome 21, excepting two small regions within 21q11.1 and 21q22.3, as being shared among the mothers of the DS children. However, two members of the pedigree, including one DS mother with a normal G-banded karyotype, carried supernumerary alleles at markers 2503J9TG, D21S369, and D21S215, which span the region from 21pter to 21q11.1. Fluorescence in situ hybridization using a centromeric probe hybridizing to chromosomes 13 and 21 did not reveal a novel location, ruling out a cryptic centromeric translocation between chromosome 21 and any chromosome other than chromosome 13. The level of meiotic recombination on chromosome 21 was unusually high in this family as well. We hypothesize that a cryptic rearrangement within the highly repetitive region of 21q11.1 is present in this family, disrupting pairing and leading to an increased risk of non-disjunction of chromosome 21 in this family.

Published 6 October 2005 in Clin Genet, 68(5): 430-5.
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