Biomedical Papers (Mar 2022)

Haplotype analysis of the X chromosome in patients with Turner syndrome in order to verify the possible effect of imprinting on selected symptoms

  • Petr Vrtel,
  • Radek Vrtel,
  • Eva Klaskova,
  • Dita Vrbicka,
  • Katerina Adamova,
  • Jan Pavlicek,
  • Vaclav Hana,
  • Vaclav Hana,
  • Ondrej Soucek,
  • Veronika Stara,
  • Jan Lebl,
  • Marta Snajdrova,
  • Jirina Zapletalova,
  • Tomas Furst,
  • Sabina Kapralova,
  • Zdenek Tauber,
  • Eva Krejcirikova,
  • Marketa Routilova,
  • Julia Stellmachova,
  • Radek Vodicka,
  • Martin Prochazka

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5507/bp.2020.060
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 166, no. 1
pp. 63 – 67

Abstract

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Aims. Turner syndrome is the only chromosome monosomy that is postnatally compatible with life. The reported incidence of TS is 1 in 2500 liveborn girls. The phenotype of these girls is highly variable, with cardiac abnormalities being life-threatening defects. The aim of the study was to reveal the possible influence of the parental origin of the X chromosome in these patients on a selected phenotype that is associated with Turner syndrome. Selected symptoms and parameters were: a bicuspid aortic valve, aortic coarctation, lymphoedema, pterygium colli, coeliac disease, thyroiditis, otitis media, diabetes mellitus 2, renal abnormalities, spontaneous puberty, and IVF. Methods. The X chromosome haplotype was determined for a group of 45,X patients verified by native FISH. A molecular diagnostic method based on the detection of different lengths of X chromosome-linked STR markers using the Argus X-12 QS kit was used to determine the X haplotype. Results. Our results, analysed by Fisher's exact (factorial) test, suggest independence between the maternal/paternal origin of the inherited X chromosome and the presence of the anomalies that were studied (P=1 to P=0.34). Conclusion. In the group of 45,X patients, who were precisely selected by means of the native FISH method, no correlation was demonstrated with the parental origin of the X chromosome and the observed symptom.

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