On 2017 Oct 18, Nicoletta Villa commented:
- The first question is: how to define this chromosome? It had a complete X banding exactly symmetrical above and below the primary constriction and presented an active centromere in an anomalous position definable as neocentromere, though canonical (repositioning).
- According to the International System for Human Cytogenetic Nomenclature (ISCN) 2016, the definition of centric fission is: “break in the centromere resulting in two derivative chromosomes composed of the short and long arms, respectively”. This does not happen in the chromosome X here described since the whole chromosome (old centromere included) constitutes the isochromosome. This was also confirmed by the paracentric inversion that offers us a complicated but responsive mechanism for the isochromosome formation. Regarding the cited review (Lin and Yan, Mutat Res 2008; 658:95), we mentioned it in the introduction and discussion sections. In both cases, we reported general aspects of telomeric-like sequences. We speculated that the paracentric inversion of the entire Xp arm could be a result of a non-allelic homologous recombination mediated by inverted repeats, as reported by Warburton and Dittwald (see article for details). FISH data with pan-telomeric probes revealed the anomalous presence of TTAGGG repeats near the inactive centromeres in a highly symmetrical manner, absent in the Xp terminations. Therefore, we used BAC probes and identified the paracentric inversion of the entire short arm that made the telomere common sequences completely interstitial. Silahtaroglu et al (J Med Genet 1998; 35:682) reported a paracentric inversion that did not involve telomeric region in a XXY male (“Simultaneous hybridisation with biotin labelled "All Centromere" and digoxigenin labelled "All Telomere" probes showed that the telomeric sequences were not inverted). This is not our case.
- Rivera et al. (Clin Genet 1999, 55:122) reported a case showing a rearrangement due to a centric fission of chromosome 12 and a translocation on chromosome 8p. This last rearrangement resulted in a fusion between 8ptel and 12cen mediated by interstitial telomeric sequences, as well written in the abstract. In our case there was not a fusion between two different chromosomes, but an isochromosome, confirmed by banding, FISH and by means of microsatellite segregation study. Moreover, we demonstrated the presence of telomeric sequences near to the old centromeres.
- We did not perform the androgen receptor inactivation test because the itrc(X) was always inactivated in reverse banding (RBA) as it is possible to see in figure 1B and also the microsatellite polymorphisms never showed a third allele. Moreover, the mosaic situation made a quantitative analysis very difficult or even impossible due to the loss of Xq.
- The frequency of chromosomal abnormalities in couples subjected to medically assisted procreation appears to be increased (literature data), but we couldn’t correlate the chromosomal rearrangement here described with PMA. We don’t know parental origin of the rearrangement and parents refused further analyses.
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