Artículos de revistas
Testis development in the absence of SRY: chromosomal rearrangements at SOX9 and SOX3
Fecha
2015Registro en:
European Journal of Human Genetics Volumen: 23 Número: 8 Páginas: 1025-1032 Aug 2015
DOI: 10.1038/ejhg.2014.237
Autor
Vetro, Annalisa
Dehghani, Mohammad Reza
Kraoua, Lilia
Giorda, Roberto
Beri, Silvana
Cardarelli, Laura
Merico, Maurizio
Manolakos, Emmanouil
Parada Bustamante, Alexis
Castro, Andrea
Radi, Orietta
Camerino, Giovanna
Brusco, Alfredo
Sabaghian, Marjan
Sofocleous, Crystalena
Forzano, Francesca
Palumbo, Pietro
Palumbo, Orazio
Calvano, Savino
Zelante, Leopoldo
Grammatico, Paola
Giglio, Sabrina
Basly, Mohamed
Chaabouni, Myriam
Carella, Massimo
Russo, Gianni
Bonaglia, Maria Clara
Zuffardi, Orsetta
Institución
Resumen
Duplications in the similar to 2 Mb desert region upstream of SOX9 at 17q24.3 may result in familial 46, XX disorders of sex development (DSD) without any effects on the XY background. A balanced translocation with its breakpoint falling within the same region has also been described in one XX DSD subject. We analyzed, by conventional and molecular cytogenetics, 19 novel SRY-negative unrelated 46, XX subjects both familial and sporadic, with isolated DSD. One of them had a de novo reciprocal t(11; 17) translocation. Two cases carried partially overlapping 17q24.3 duplications similar to 500 kb upstream of SOX9, both inherited from their normal fathers. Breakpoints cloning showed that both duplications were in tandem, whereas the 17q in the reciprocal translocation was broken at similar to 800 kb upstream of SOX9, which is not only close to a previously described 46, XX DSD translocation, but also to translocations without any effects on the gonadal development. A further XX male, ascertained because of intellectual disability, carried a de novo cryptic duplication at Xq27.1, involving SOX3. CNVs involving SOX3 or its flanking regions have been reported in four XX DSD subjects. Collectively in our cohort of 19 novel cases of SRY-negative 46, XX DSD, the duplications upstream of SOX9 account for similar to 10.5% of the cases, and are responsible for the disease phenotype, even when inherited from a normal father. Translocations interrupting this region may also affect the gonadal development, possibly depending on the chromatin context of the recipient chromosome. SOX3 duplications may substitute SRY in some XX subjects.