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We describe eight patients who have alpha thalassemia which cannot be accounted for by the Mendelian inheritance of abnormal alpha globin genes. Apart from the hematologic abnormality, the other universal clinical finding is mild to moderate mental handicap; there is also a broad spectrum of associated dysmorphic features. Initial analysis of the alpha globin gene complex (which maps to chromosome band 16p13.3), demonstrated that the alpha thalassemia results from failure of the patient to inherit an alpha globin allele from one of the parents. Using a combined molecular and cytogenetic approach, we have extended this analysis to show that all of these patients have 16p deletions which are variable in extent but limited to the terminal band 16p13.3; in at least four cases the deletion results from unbalanced chromosome translocation, and hence aneuploidy of a second chromosome is also present. The relatively nonspecific clinical phenotype contrasts with the other currently known microdeletion syndromes; this may reflect ascertainment bias in the recognition of such syndromes. This work represents the first step in the characterization of a new microdeletion syndrome that is probably underdiagnosed at present.

Type

Journal article

Journal

Am J Hum Genet

Publication Date

06/1990

Volume

46

Pages

1112 - 1126

Keywords

Adolescent, Adult, Animals, Blotting, Southern, Child, Child, Preschool, Chromosome Banding, Chromosome Deletion, Chromosomes, Human, Pair 16, DNA, Female, Globins, Humans, Hybrid Cells, Intellectual Disability, Karyotyping, Male, Mice, Restriction Mapping, Syndrome, Thalassemia