Terminal 18q deletions are stabilized by neotelomeres

18q 末端缺失由新端粒稳定

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作者:Roberta Santos Guilherme, Karen E Hermetz, Patrícia Teixeira Varela, Ana Beatriz Alvarez Perez, Vera Ayres Meloni, M Katharine Rudd, Leslie Domenici Kulikowski, Maria Isabel Melaragno

Background

All human chromosomes are capped by tandem repeat (TTAGGG)n sequences that protect them against end-to-end fusion and are essential to chromosomal replication and integrity. Therefore, after a chromosomal breakage, the deleted chromosomes must be stabilized by retaining the telomere or acquiring a new cap, by telomere healing or telomere capture. There are few reports with molecular approaches on the mechanisms involved in stabilization of 18q terminal deletions.

Conclusions

We found that all six deleted chromosomes sequenced were probably stabilized by the healing mechanism leading to a neotelomere formation.

Results

In this study we analyzed nine patients with 18q terminal deletion identified by G-banding and genomic array. FISH using PNA probe revealed telomeric signals in all deleted chromosomes tested. We fine-mapped breakpoints with customized arrays and sequenced six terminal deletion junctions. In all six deleted chromosomes sequenced, telomeric sequences were found directly attached to the breakpoints. Little or no microhomology was found at the breakpoints and none of the breaks sequenced were located in low copy repeat (LCR) regions, though repetitive elements were found around the breakpoints in five patients. One patient presented a more complex rearrangement with two deleted segments and an addition of 17 base pairs (bp). Conclusions: We found that all six deleted chromosomes sequenced were probably stabilized by the healing mechanism leading to a neotelomere formation.

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