Abstract

A Mexican 181/2-year-old girl with short stature, primary amenorrhea, and mild Turner stigmata was found to have a 45,X/46,X,ter rea(X;X)(p22.3;p22.3) karyotype in her lymphocytes. The rearranged chromosome was twice the size of a normal X, appeared to be attached head-to-head, had no detectable chromatin loss, only one primary constriction, constitutive heterochromatin at both the centromere and pseudocentromere regions, was mitotically stable, and always showed late replication. From the analysis of this and other X;X terminal rearrangements we draw four conclusions: (1) Terminal rearrangements may arise either by telomeric fusion (tel fus) without loss of genetic material or from a conventional telomeric translocation. (2) Telomeric fusions between homologous chromosomes (the commonest type) can be secondary to impaired telomeric replication. (3) Phenotypically, patients with an X;X terminal rearrangement show great variability which depends mainly on whether or not chromatin has been lost in the rejoining process and a 45,X clone. (4) Patients with an X;X telomeric fusion without mosaicism are likely to have an XXX phenotype, whereas turneroid features are expected in mixoploidies that include an X monosomic clone and in cases of translocations involving the short arms.

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