ABSTRACT
A male patient with clinical signs and symptoms of a demyelinating neuropathy was shown to have a duplication of the 1.5-Mb region on chromosome 17p11.2 by means of two-color fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). This duplication is typical for the vast majority of Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1A (CMT1A) cases. Analysis of DNA extracted from peripheral blood used to detect an EcoRI/SacI 3.2-kb junction fragment with probe pLR7.8 confirmed the CMT1A duplication, but also revealed a 7.8-kb fragment usually observed in patients with a hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP). Both fragments observed in one patient canot result from one unequal crossover. In EcoRI/SacI Southern hybridization experiments with probe pLR7.8 DNA of his healthy parents also revealed a 7.8-kB restriction fragment. A subsequent two-color FISH analysis, however, indicated a normal status for interphase nuclei of the parents. Hence we hypothesize that the 7.8-kb fragment observed in our patient and his parents is not the product of unequal crossover during meiosis but due to a polymorphism of the SacI site in a proximal CMT1A-REP element.
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Received: May 28, 1998 / Accepted July 27, 1998 / Published online: December 9, 1998
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Fuchs, C., Liehr, T., Özbey, S. et al. Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease type 1A and hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies: a SacI polymorphism in the proximal CMT1A-REP elements may lead to genetic misdiagnosis. Neurogenetics 2, 43–46 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1007/s100480050050
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s100480050050