Abstract
Background: Mosaicism with cytogenetically visible Y chromosome is found in 5–6% of Turner Syndrome
(TS) patients. Additionally, occult Y-chromosome derived material is increasingly
found in patients with monosomy X when using more sensitive molecular techniques.
These TS patients are at risk of developing gonadoblastomas when the Y genes presumed
to be involved in gonadoblastoma development (Gonadoblastoma-Y-locus; GBY) are present.
Aim: To find occult Y-chromosome material in TS patients and to correlate the patient’s
phenotype to Y-chromosome material.
Methods: We studied 60 TS-patients for presence of the Y chromosome with focus on the Gonadoblastoma
Y-locus and its extension in Yp and Yq using sensitive Y centromere and Y gene deletion
PCR assays. In addition, we evaluated their individual clinical and auxological characteristics.
Results: We identified presence of the GBY-locus in 7 patients (11.7%) including 4 patients
without evidence for a Y chromosome in their preceding standard karyotype analyses.
Clinical and auxological characteristics were similar in GBY-positive and GBY-negative
patients.
Conclusions: Presence of the GBY locus in Turner patients with no indication of the Y chromosome
in standard cytogenetic chromosome analysis can be revealed by sensitive molecular
PCR assays screening for presence of the Y centromere and the GBY-candidate-genes
in proximal Yp11 and Yq11, respectively.
Key words
molecular genetics - karyotype - Y-mosaicism - disorders of sex differentiation