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Volume 36, Issue 4, Pages 258-260 (April 2007)


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Partial Deletion of LIS1: A Pitfall in Molecular Diagnosis of Miller-Dieker Syndrome

Kosuke Izumi, MD, Gen Kuratsuji, MD, Kazushige Ikeda, MD, Takao Takahashi, MD, Kenjiro Kosaki, MDCorresponding Author Informationemail address

Received 7 August 2006; accepted 27 November 2006.

Miller-Dieker syndrome represents a microdeletion syndrome spanning the LIS1 locus at 17p13.3, the deletion of which leads to lissencephaly. A fluorescence in situ hybridization study using an LIS1 probe is considered the standard laboratory diagnostic method for Miller-Dieker syndrome. This report documents a Miller-Dieker syndrome patient who tested normal when a commercially available LIS1 fluorescence in situ hybridization study probe was used but was later demonstrated to have a partial deletion of the LIS1 locus. The present case exemplifies a major shortcoming of commercially available fluorescence in situ hybridization studies for the diagnosis of microdeletion syndromes such as Miller-Dieker syndrome: that is, relatively small deletion can potentially remain undetected.

Department of Pediatrics, Keio University School of Medicine, Tokyo, Japan.

Corresponding Author InformationCommunications should be addressed to: Dr. Kosaki; Department of Pediatrics; Keio University School of Medicine; 35 Shinanomachi, Shinjuku-ku; Tokyo, 160-8582, Japan.

PII: S0887-8994(06)00718-1

doi:10.1016/j.pediatrneurol.2006.11.015


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