Frontiers in Genetics (Dec 2017)

Developmental Coordination Disorder in a Patient with Mental Disability and a Mild Phenotype Carrying Terminal 6q26-qter Deletion

  • Marianna De Cinque,
  • Marianna De Cinque,
  • Orazio Palumbo,
  • Ermelinda Mazzucco,
  • Antonella Simone,
  • Antonella Simone,
  • Pietro Palumbo,
  • Renata Ciavatta,
  • Giuliana Maria,
  • Rosangela Ferese,
  • Stefano Gambardella,
  • Antonella Angiolillo,
  • Massimo Carella,
  • Silvio Garofalo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2017.00206
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Terminal deletion of chromosome 6q is a rare chromosomal abnormality associated with variable phenotype spectrum. Although intellectual disability, facial dysmorphism, seizures and brain abnormalities are typical features of this syndrome, genotype–phenotype correlation needs to be better understood. We report the case of a 6-year-old Caucasian boy with a clinical diagnosis of intellectual disability, delayed language development and dyspraxia who carries an approximately 8 Mb de novo heterozygous microdeletion in the 6q26-q27 locus identified by karyotype and defined by high-resolution SNP-array analysis. This patient has no significant structural brain or other organ malformation, and he shows a very mild phenotype compared to similar 6q26-qter deletion. The patient phenotype also suggests that a dyspraxia susceptibility gene is located among the deleted genes.

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