Journal article
Prenatal diagnosis of fragile X syndrome in a twin pregnancy complicated by a complete retraction
Y Prawer, M Hunter, S Cronin, L Ling, SA Vera, M Fahey, N Gelfand, R Oertel, E Bartlett, D Francis, D Godler
Genes | MDPI | Published : 2018
DOI: 10.3390/genes9060287
Abstract
Fragile X syndrome (FXS) is usually associated with a CGG repeat expansion >200 repeats within the FMR1 gene, known as a full mutation (FM). FM alleles produce abnormal methylation of the FMR1 promoter with reduction or silencing of FMR1 gene expression. Furthermore, premutation (PM: 55–199 CGGs) and full mutation alleles usually expand in size when maternally transmitted to progeny. This study describes a PM allele carried by the mother decreasing to a normal sized allele in a male from a dichorionic diamniotic (DCDA) twin pregnancy, with the female twin inheriting FM (200–790 CGGs), PM (130 CGGs) and normal-sized (39 CGGs) alleles. Further evidence of instability of the maternal PM allele ..
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Awarded by National Science Foundation
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was funded by The Victorian Government's Operational Infrastructure Support Program, Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Royal Children's Hospital Foundation, Martin & E.H. Flack Trust, Pierce Armstrong Trust, Financial Markets Foundation for Children (Australia) (FMFC; grant number: 2017-361), the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC; project grant numbers: 104299 and 1103389). D.E. Godler was supported by the Next Generation Clinical Researchers Program-Career Development Fellowship Funded by the Medical Research Future Fund (grant number 1141334).