Detection of low level sex chromosome mosaicism in Ullrich–Turner syndrome patients

Ullrich–Turner syndrome (UTS) is most commonly due to a 45,X chromosome defect, but is also seen in patients with a variety of X‐chromosome abnormalities or 45,X/46,XY mosaicism. The phenotype of UTS patients is highly variable, and depends largely on the karyotype. Patients are at an increased risk of gonadoblastoma when a Y‐derived chromosome or chromosome fragment is present. Since constitutional mosaicism is present in approximately 50% of UTS patients, the identification of minor cell populations is clinically important and a challenge to laboratories. We identified 50 females with a 45,X karyotype as the sole abnormality or as part of a more complex karyotype. Twenty two (44%) had a 45,X karyotype; mosaicism for a second normal or structurally abnormal X was observed in 24 (48%) samples, and mosaicism for Y chromosomal material in 4 (8%) cases. To further investigate the possibility of mosaicism in the 22 patients with an apparently non‐mosaic 45,X karyotype, we performed FISH using centromere probes for the X and Y chromosomes. A minor XX cell line was identified in 3 patients, and the 45,X result was confirmed in 19 samples. No samples with XY mosaicism were identified. We describe our validation process for a FISH assay to be used in clinical practice to identify XX or XY mosaicism. FISH as an adjunct to karyotype analysis provides a sensitive and cost‐effective technique to identify sex chromosome mosaicism in UTS patients. © 2005 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

[1]  A. Wiktor,et al.  FISH analysis helps identify low-level mosaicism in Ullrich-Turner syndrome patients , 2004, Genetics in Medicine.

[2]  P. Canto,et al.  Gonadoblastoma in Turner syndrome patients with nonmosaic 45,X karyotype and Y chromosome sequences. , 2004, Cancer genetics and cytogenetics.

[3]  R. Reindollar,et al.  Turner syndrome in adolescence. , 2003, Obstetrics and gynecology clinics of North America.

[4]  B. Mendonca,et al.  Reply to correspondence from Hall—“Detection of Y-specific sequences in patients with Turner syndrome” , 2002 .

[5]  J. Hall Detection of Y-specific sequences in patients with Turner syndrome. , 2002, American journal of medical genetics.

[6]  B. Mendonca,et al.  Detection of Y-specific sequences in 122 patients with Turner syndrome: nested PCR is not a reliable method. , 2002, American journal of medical genetics.

[7]  I. Lerer,et al.  Wiedemann-Beckwith syndrome: further prenatal characterization of the condition. , 2002, American journal of medical genetics.

[8]  C. Gravholt,et al.  Occurrence of gonadoblastoma in females with Turner syndrome and Y chromosome material: a population study. , 2000, The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism.

[9]  D. Page,et al.  Functional coherence of the human Y chromosome. , 1997, Science.

[10]  D. Miller,et al.  Ullrich-Turner syndrome with a small ring X chromosome and presence of mental retardation. , 1992, American journal of medical genetics.

[11]  E. Hook,et al.  The distribution of chromosomal genotypes associated with Turner's syndrome: livebirth prevalence rates and evidence for diminished fetal mortality and severity in genotypes associated with structural X abnormalities or mosaicism , 2004, Human Genetics.

[12]  T. J. Gargan Turner's syndrome. , 1997, The New England journal of medicine.