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Xp22.31 Microdeletion due to Microhomology-Mediated Break-Induced Replication in a Boy with Contiguous Gene Deletion Syndrome.

The Xp22.31 region is characterized by a low frequency of interspersed repeats and a low GC content. Submicroscopic deletions at Xp22.31 involving STS and ANOS1 (alias KAL1) underlie X-linked ichthyosis and Kallmann syndrome, respectively. Of the known microdeletions at Xp22.31, a common approximately 1.5-Mb deletion encompassing STS was ascribed to nonallelic homologous recombination, while 2 ANOS1-containing deletions were attributed to nonhomologous end-joining. However, the genomic bases of other microdeletions within the Xp22.31 region remain to be elucidated. Here, we identified a 2,735,696-bp deletion encompassing STS and ANOS1 in a boy with X-linked ichthyosis and Kallmann syndrome. The breakpoints of the deletion were located within Alu repeats and shared 2-bp microhomology. The fusion junction was not associated with nucleotide stretches, and the breakpoint-flanking regions harbored no palindromes or noncanonical DNA motifs. These results indicate that microhomology-mediated break-induced replication (MMBIR) can cause deletions at Xp22.31, resulting in contiguous gene deletion syndrome. It appears that interspersed repeats without other known rearrangement-inducing DNA features or high GC contents are sufficient to stimulate MMBIR at Xp22.31.

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