Abstract
Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS) is caused by deletions involving chromosome region 4p16.3. The minimal diagnostic criteria include mild-to-severe mental retardation, hypotonia, growth delay and a distinctive facial appearance. Variable manifestations include feeding difficulties, seizures and major congenital anomalies. Clinical variation may be explained by variation in the size of the deletion. However, in addition to having a deletion involving 4p16.3, previous studies indicate that approximately 15% of WHS patients are also duplicated for another chromosome region due to an unbalanced translocation. It is likely that the prevalence of unbalanced translocations resulting in WHS is underestimated since they can be missed using conventional chromosome analyses such as karyotyping and WHS-specific fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH). Therefore, we hypothesized that some of the clinical variation may be due to an unrecognized and unbalanced translocation. Array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) is a new technology that can analyze the entire genome at a significantly higher resolution over conventional cytogenetics to characterize unbalanced rearrangements. We used aCGH to analyze 33 patients with WHS and found a much higher than expected frequency of unbalanced translocations (15/33, 45%). Seven of these 15 cases were cryptic translocations not detected by a previous karyotype combined with WHS-specific FISH. Three of these 15 cases had an unbalanced translocation involving the short arm of an acrocentric chromosome and were not detected by either aCGH or subtelomere FISH. Analysis of clinical manifestations of each patient also revealed that patients with an unbalanced translocation often presented with exceptions to some expected phenotypes.
Similar content being viewed by others
Log in or create a free account to read this content
Gain free access to this article, as well as selected content from this journal and more on nature.com
or
References
Battaglia A, Carey JC, Wright TJ : Wolf–Hirschhorn (4p-) syndrome. Adv Pediatr 2001; 48: 75–113.
Lurie IW, Lazjuk GI, Ussova YI, Presman EB, Gurevich DB : The Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome. Clin Genet 1980; 17: 375–384.
Zollino M, Di Stefano C, Zampino G et al: Genotype–phenotype correlations and clinical diagnostic criteria in Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome. Am J Med Genet 2000; 94: 254–261.
Wieczorek D, Krause M, Majewski F et al: Effect of the size of the deletion and clinical manifestation in Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome: analysis of 13 patients with a de novo deletion. Eur J Hum Genet 2000; 8: 519–526.
Estabrooks LL, Rao KW, Driscoll DA et al: Preliminary phenotypic map of chromosome 4p16 based on 4p deletions. Am J Med Genet 1995; 57: 581–586.
Meloni AM, Shepard RR, Battaglia A, Wright TJ, Carey JC : Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome: correlation between cytogenetics, FISH, and severity of disease. Am J Hum Genet 2000; 67: 149.
Battaglia A, Carey JC, Cederhom P, Viskochil DH, Brothman AR, Galasso C : Natural history of Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome: experience with 15 cases. Pediatrics 1999; 103 (4 Part 1): 830–836.
Zollino M, Lecce R, Selicorni A et al: A double cryptic chromosome imbalance is an important factor to explain phenotypic variability in Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome. Eur J Hum Genet 2004; 12: 797–804.
Bamshad M, O'Quinn JR, Carey JC : Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome and a split-hand malformation. Am J Med Genet 1998; 75: 351–354.
Kohlschmidt N, Zielinski J, Brude E et al: Prenatal diagnosis of a fetus with a cryptic translocation 4p;18p and Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS). Prenat Diagn 2000; 20: 152–155.
Kozma C, Hunt M, Meck J, Traboulsi E, Scribanu N : Familial Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome associated with Rieger anomaly of the eye. Ophthalmic Paediatr Genet 1990; 11: 23–30.
Petek E, Wagner K, Steiner H, Schaffer H, Kroisel PM : Prenatal diagnosis of partial trisomy 4q26-qter and monosomy for the Wolf–Hirschhorn critical region in a fetus with split hand malformation. Prenat Diagn 2000; 20: 349–352.
Tapper JK, Zhang S, Harirah HM et al: Prenatal diagnosis of a fetus with unbalanced translocation (4;13)(p16;q32) with overlapping features of Patau and Wolf–Hirschhorn syndromes. Fetal Diagn Ther 2002; 17: 347–351.
Wieczorek D, Krause M, Majewski F et al: Unexpected high frequency of de novo unbalanced translocations in patients with Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS). J Med Genet 2000; 37: 798–804.
Mantripragada KK, Buckley PG, de Stahl TD, Dumanski JP : Genomic microarrays in the spotlight. Trends Genet 2004; 20: 87–94.
Snijders AM, Pinkel D, Albertson DG : Current status and future prospects of array-based comparative genomic hybridisation. Brief Funct Genomic Proteomic 2003; 2: 37–45.
Pinkel D, Segraves R, Sudar D et al: High resolution analysis of DNA copy number variation using comparative genomic hybridization to microarrays. Nat Genet 1998; 20: 207–211.
Stevenson DA, Carey JC, Cowley BC, Bayrak-Toydemir P, Mao R, Brothman AR : 4p terminal deletion and 11p subtelomeric duplication detected by genomic microarray in a patient with Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome and an atypical phenotype. J Pediatr 2004; 145: 840–842.
South ST, Swensen JJ, Maxwell T, Rope A, Brothman AR, Chen Z : A new genomic mechanism leading to cri-du-chat syndrome. Am J Med Genet A 2006; 140: 2714–2720.
Estabrooks LL, Rao KW, Korf B : Interstitial deletion of distal chromosome 4p in a patient without classical Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome. Am J Med Genet 1993; 45: 97–100.
White DM, Pillers DA, Reiss JA, Brown MG, Magenis RE : Interstitial deletions of the short arm of chromosome 4 in patients with a similar combination of multiple minor anomalies and mental retardation. Am J Med Genet 1995; 57: 588–597.
Wright TJ, Ricke DO, Denison K et al: A transcript map of the newly defined 165 kb Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome critical region. Hum Mol Genet 1997; 6: 317–324.
Altherr MR, Wright TJ, Denison K, Perez-Castro AV, Johnson VP : Delimiting the Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome critical region to 750 kilobase pairs. Am J Med Genet 1997; 71: 47–53.
Rauch A, Schellmoser S, Kraus C et al: First known microdeletion within the Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome critical region refines genotype–phenotype correlation. Am J Med Genet 2001; 99: 338–342.
Zollino M, Lecce R, Fischetto R et al: Mapping the Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome phenotype outside the currently accepted WHS critical region and defining a new critical region, WHSCR-2. Am J Hum Genet 2003; 72: 590–597.
Rodriguez L, Zollino M, Climent S et al: The new Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome critical region (WHSCR-2): a description of a second case. Am J Med Genet A 2005; 136: 175–178.
Ravnan JB, Tepperberg JH, Papenhausen P et al: Subtelomere FISH analysis of 11 688 cases: an evaluation of the frequency and pattern of subtelomere rearrangements in individuals with developmental disabilities. J Med Genet 2006; 43: 478–489.
Giglio S, Calvari V, Gregato G et al: Heterozygous submicroscopic inversions involving olfactory receptor-gene clusters mediate the recurrent t(4;8)(p16;p23) translocation. Am J Hum Genet 2002; 71: 276–285.
Van Buggenhout G, Melotte C, Dutta B et al: Mild Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome: micro-array CGH analysis of atypical 4p16.3 deletions enables refinement of the genotype–phenotype map. J Med Genet 2004; 41: 691–698.
Olender T, Feldmesser E, Atarot T, Eisenstein M, Lancet D : The olfactory receptor universe—from whole genome analysis to structure and evolution. Genet Mol Res 2004; 3: 545–553.
Acknowledgements
We thank the 4p-Support Group, the patients with WHS, their families, and their caregivers who participated in this study. Funding of this study was provided through grants from the Primary Children's Medical Center Foundation and the Children's Health Research Center at the University of Utah.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Corresponding author
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
South, S., Whitby, H., Battaglia, A. et al. Comprehensive analysis of Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome using array CGH indicates a high prevalence of translocations. Eur J Hum Genet 16, 45–52 (2008). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ejhg.5201915
Received:
Revised:
Accepted:
Published:
Issue date:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ejhg.5201915
Keywords
This article is cited by
-
Prenatal sonographic findings in confirmed cases of Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth (2022)
-
Deletions involving genes WHSC1 and LETM1 may be necessary, but are not sufficient to cause Wolf–Hirschhorn Syndrome
European Journal of Human Genetics (2014)
-
Prenatal diagnosis of Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome confirmed by comparative genomic hybridization array: report of two cases and review of the literature
Molecular Cytogenetics (2012)
-
Fine-grained facial phenotype–genotype analysis in Wolf–Hirschhorn syndrome
European Journal of Human Genetics (2012)
-
Clinical utility gene card for: Wolf–Hirschhorn (4p-) syndrome
European Journal of Human Genetics (2011)


