Three of the patients reported had a consistent proximal breakpoint on chromosome 2, but varying distal breakpoints.[1][2] The patients have 2p15–16.1 deletions of 5.7 megabases (Mb), 4.5 Mb, 3.9 Mb, 3.35Mb 3.3Mb and 570 kilobases, respectively.[4] In all 21 patients the deletions are de novo — neither parent possessed nor transmitted the mutation to the affected individual. One patient is a genetic mosaic, having some cells with the deletion and others without.[2]
Affected genes
The largest deletion encompasses approximately 15 protein-coding genes, 6 pseudogenes and a number of other as yet uncharacterised candidates, including:[2][6]
AHSA2, activator of heat shock 90kDa protein ATPase homolog
^ abcdefde Leeuw N, Pfundt R, Koolen DA, Neefs I, Scheltinga I, Mieloo H, Sistermans EA, Nillesen W, Smeets DF, de Vries BB, Knoers NV (2008). "A newly recognised microdeletion syndrome involving 2p15p16.1: narrowing down the critical region by adding another patient detected by genome wide tiling path array comparative genomic hybridisation analysis". J Med Genet. 45 (2): 122–4. doi:10.1136/jmg.2007.054049. PMID18245392. S2CID972258.
^ abcChabchoub E, Vermeesch JR, de Ravel T, de Cock P, Fryns JP (2008). "The facial dysmorphy in the newly recognised microdeletion 2p15-p16.1 refined to a 570 kb region in 2p15". J Med Genet. 45 (3): 189–92. doi:10.1136/jmg.2007.056176. PMID18310269. S2CID32961901.