RESUMO
We report on a female patient who was first evaluated at the age of 6 years with developmental delay, dysmorphic facial features, seizures, and autistic behavior. A brain CT showed complete agenesis of the corpus callosum, and EEG recorded bilateral epileptogenic foci. Karyotype analysis revealed 45,X,psu dic(14;X)(p11;p22). FISH using 14q and Xp subtelomeric probes, combined with a SHOX gene-specific probe, and centromere X and XIST gene analysis revealed ish psu dic(14;X)(D14S1420+; DXYS129-, SHOX-, DXZ1+, XIST+). Array CGH detected a 2-Mb loss at Xp22.33 and a 4.6-Mb gain at Xp22.2p22.12. The deletion contains 34 genes, of which CSF2RA and SHOX are OMIM morbid genes. The duplication also contains some OMIM morbid genes, of which CDKL5, NH5, RPS6KA3, and AP1S2 are the most important. The late replicating chromatin technique was used to detect the pattern of X inactivation in the normal X and in the translocated chromosome. The translocated X was found to be inactive in 70% of the studied blood lymphocytes with patchy extension of inactivation to chromosome 14. In conclusion, the phenotype of the patient may be partially affected by the haploinsufficiency of the genes that are known to escape X inactivation and that lie within the deleted region and by other deleted or duplicated genes on the abnormal X chromosome due to an alternative pattern of X inactivation. The phenotype of the patient was significantly aggravated and complicated by the functional monosomy of some genes on chromosome 14 due to partial spreading of inactivation and silencing of those genes. This case report indicates the importance of structural and functional studies and emphasizes the clinical importance of the follow-up of abnormal microarrays.