Abstract
BackgroundThere are only ten reported cases of interstitial deletions involving cytogenetic bands 10q21.3q22.2 in the literature. Of the ten patients with overlapping 10q21.3q22.2 interstitial deletions, only nine have been characterized by chromosomal microarray analysis. Here, we report a two-and-a-half-year-old patient with a de novo 10.2-Mb deletion that extends from 10q21.3 to 10q22.3 and contains 92 protein coding genes.Case presentationThe patient is the product of a 37-week dizygotic twin pregnancy and presented with global developmental delay, hypotonia, feeding difficulties, short stature, poor weight gain, scaphocephaly, retrognathia, hypoplasia of the optic nerves/chiasms, a distinctive facial gestalt, as well as additional minor dysmorphic features. The deletion identified in our patient is the second largest reported interstitial deletion involving the 10q21.3q22.2 region. Our patient presents with the generalized features observed in 10q21.3q22.2 deletion patients and also presents with several novel findings including scaphocephaly, hypoplasia of the optic nerves and chiasms, and a very distinctive facial gestalt.ConclusionsBased on a literature review, we identify a commonly deleted region and suggest that KAT6B is a critical gene within the 10q21.3q22.2 region. However, a review of the reported overlapping deletions also suggests that there are additional critical genes contributing to the clinical presentation of these patients.
Highlights
There are only ten reported cases of interstitial deletions involving cytogenetic bands 10q21.3q22.2 in the literature
Based on a literature review, we identify a commonly deleted region and suggest that KAT6B is a critical gene within the 10q21.3q22.2 region
The initial patient was characterized through G-banded chromosome analysis by Cook et al (1999), in a 4-month-old male who presented with growth deficiency, developmental delay, ocular hypertelorism, and retrognathia [1]
Summary
Based on a literature review, we identify a commonly deleted region and suggest that KAT6B is a critical gene within the 10q21.3q22.2 region. A review of the reported overlapping deletions suggests that there are additional critical genes contributing to the clinical presentation of these patients
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