Abstract

Background. The presence of Y chromosome material in Turner's syndrome (TS) patients is a risk factor for the development of gonadoblastoma. Although conventional cytogenetic analysis is the definitive diagnosis of TS, low level Y chromosome mosaicism may be missed. Molecular analysis has demonstrated a higher proportion of mosaicism, but there is controversy regarding the prevalence of Y chromosome-derived material in those patients. Aim and Methods. This study was conducted to investigate the prevalence of hidden Y chromosome mosaicism in 48 TS Egyptian patients using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for molecular DNA analysis of SRY gene and compare our results with those in the literature. Results. None of TS patients had a cytogenetically obvious Y chromosome; Y chromosome material was detected only at molecular analysis. SRY gene was found in 9 TS patients (18.75%) with the classical 45,X karyotype, whereas all other patients were SRY negative. Conclusion. Cytogenetically undetected Y chromosome mosaicism is common in TS patients; these data reinforce the need for adequate diagnosis of Y chromosome material in those patients. Molecular screening for Y chromosome-derived DNA should be routinely carried out in all TS patients.

Highlights

  • Turner’s syndrome (TS) is one of the most common chromosomal abnormalities affecting 1 in 2500 newborn females [1]

  • Conventional cytogenetic analysis is the definitive diagnosis of TS, it alone cannot be used to identify Y chromosome material or SRY gene; molecular evaluation of Y-derivative sequences is useful to search for low frequency or hidden Y mosaicisms in 45,X karyotypes [12, 16]

  • There is controversy regarding the prevalence of hidden Y chromosome-derived material in TS patients; the present study was conducted to establish the prevalence of hidden Y chromosome mosaicism in TS Egyptian patients and compare our results with those in the literature

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Turner’s syndrome (TS) is one of the most common chromosomal abnormalities affecting 1 in 2500 newborn females [1]. Molecular analysis has demonstrated a higher proportion of mosaicism, but there is controversy regarding the prevalence of Y chromosome-derived material in those patients. This study was conducted to investigate the prevalence of hidden Y chromosome mosaicism in 48 TS Egyptian patients using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) for molecular DNA analysis of SRY gene and compare our results with those in the literature. None of TS patients had a cytogenetically obvious Y chromosome; Y chromosome material was detected only at molecular analysis. Undetected Y chromosome mosaicism is common in TS patients; these data reinforce the need for adequate diagnosis of Y chromosome material in those patients. Molecular screening for Y chromosome-derived DNA should be routinely carried out in all TS patients

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call