Maternal origin of 15q11–13 deletions in Angelman syndrome suggests a role for genomic imprinting

CA Williams, RT Zori, JW Stone, BA Gray… - American journal of …, 1990 - Wiley Online Library
CA Williams, RT Zori, JW Stone, BA Gray, ES Cantu, H Ostrer
American journal of medical genetics, 1990Wiley Online Library
Six persons with the classical Angelman syndrome (AS) phenotype and de novo deletions of
chromosome 15q11‐q13 were studied to determine the parental origin of the chromosome
deletion. Four of the 6 patients had informative cytogenetic studies and all demonstrated
maternal inheritance of the deletion. These findings, together with other reported cases of
the origin of the chromosome 15 deletion in AS, suggest that deletion of the maternally
contributed chromosome leads to the AS phenotype. This contrasts with the Prader‐Willi …
Abstract
Six persons with the classical Angelman syndrome (AS) phenotype and de novo deletions of chromosome 15q11‐q13 were studied to determine the parental origin of the chromosome deletion. Four of the 6 patients had informative cytogenetic studies and all demonstrated maternal inheritance of the deletion. These findings, together with other reported cases of the origin of the chromosome 15 deletion in AS, suggest that deletion of the maternally contributed chromosome leads to the AS phenotype. This contrasts with the Prader‐Willi syndrome (PWS) in which a similar deletion of the paternally contributed chromosome 15 is observed. In deletion cases, a parental gamete effect such as genomic imprinting may be the best model to explain why apparently identical 15q11‐q13 deletions may develop the different phenotypes of AS or PWS.
Wiley Online Library