Abstract

BackgroundRing chromosome 22 is a rare human constitutional cytogenetic abnormality. Clinical features of neurofibromatosis type 1 and 2 as well as different tumour types have been reported in patients with ring chromosome 22. The pathogenesis of these tumours is not always clear yet.MethodsWe report on a female patient with a ring chromosome 22 presenting with severe mental retardation, autistic behaviour, café-au-lait macules and facial dysmorphism. Peripheral blood lymphocytes were karyotyped and array CGH was performed on extracted DNA. At the age of 20 years she was diagnosed with a unilateral vestibular schwannoma. Tumour cells were analyzed by karyotyping, array CGH and NF2 mutation analysis.ResultsKaryotype on peripheral blood lymphocytes revealed a ring chromosome 22 in all analyzed cells. A 1 Mb array CGH experiment on peripheral blood DNA showed a deletion of 5 terminal clones on the long arm of chromosome 22. Genetic analysis of vestibular schwannoma tissue revealed loss of the ring chromosome 22 and a somatic second hit in the NF2 gene on the remaining chromosome 22.ConclusionWe conclude that tumours can arise by the combination of loss of the ring chromosome and a pathogenic NF2 mutation on the remaining chromosome 22 in patients with ring chromosome 22. Our findings indicate that patients with a ring 22 should be monitored for NF2-related tumours starting in adolescence.

Highlights

  • Ring chromosome 22 is a rare human constitutional cytogenetic abnormality

  • We report on a patient with a r(22) and signs of neurofibromatosis who presented with a unilateral vestibular schwannoma at the age of 20

  • Cytogenetic studies Cytogenetic analysis of G-banded metaphase chromosomes was performed according to standard cytogenetic procedures on peripheral blood lymphocytes, skin-biopsy derived fibroblasts and on a primary culture of Schwann cells from the vestibular schwannoma

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Summary

Introduction

Ring chromosome 22 is a rare human constitutional cytogenetic abnormality. Clinical features of neurofibromatosis type 1 and 2 as well as different tumour types have been reported in patients with ring chromosome 22. The pathogenesis of these tumours is not always clear yet. Ring chromosome 22 [r(22)] is a rare human constitutional abnormality. In common with other ring chromosomes, r(22) is assumed to arise from breakage and subsequent fusion of both chromosome arms with concomitant loss of sequences distal to the breakpoints [5]. In a large review of 35 reported cases 22q loss varied from less than 69 kb up to 10.2 Mb in size with a weak correlation between the phenotypic variables and deletion size [3]. Sister chromatid exchanges during mitosis can lead to formation of dicentric or interlocked rings and subsequent aneuploidy or rearrangements within the chromosome [6]

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