Erin N. Wakeling, Fatimah A. Nahhas, Gerald L. Feldman
Triple-primed PCR assays have become the preferred fragile X syndrome testing method. Using a commercially available assay, we detected a reproducible extra peak(s) in 0.5% of 13,161 clinical samples. The objectives of this study were to determine the cause of these extra peaks; to identify whether these peaks represent an assay specific artifact, an underlying chromosome aneuploidy, or somatic mosaicism; and to ascertain their clinical relevance. The presence of an extra allele(s) was confirmed by a laboratory-developed PCR, with sequencing of the FMR1 5′ UTR or Southern blot for some samples. The laboratory-developed procedure detected the extra allele(s) in 57 of 64 samples. Thus, we confirmed an extra peak, typically of lower abundance, in approximately 0.4% of all samples. Of these samples, 5 were from males and 52 were from heterozygous or homozygous females. Six patients likely had X chromosome aneuploidies. In 82.3% of samples, the extra allele had fewer repeats than the predominant allele(s). Additional alleles detected by FMR1 triple-primed PCR are not an assay-specific artifact and are likely due to X chromosome aneuploidies or somatic repeat instability. Additional normal alleles likely have no clinical significance for fragile X syndrome carrier or affected status. Extra alleles in individuals with normal karyotypes probably represent FMR1 somatic variation.
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