We have used a panel of 13 DNA markers in the distal region of chromos
ome 14q to characterize deletions in three patients determined cytogen
etically to have a ring or terminally deleted chromosome 14. We have c
haracterized one patient with a ring chromosome 14 [r (14) (p13q32.33)
] and two with terminal deletions [del (14) (pter-->q32.3:)]. The two
patients with cytogenetically identical terminal deletions of chromoso
me 14 were found to differ markedly when;characterized with molecular
markers. In one patient, none of the markers tested were deleted, indi
cating that the apparent terminal deletion is actually due to either a
n undetected interstitial deletion or a cryptic translocation event. I
n the other patient, the deletion was consistent with the cytogenetic
observations, The deleted chromosome was shown to be of paternal origi
n. The long-arm breakpoint of the ring chromosome was mapped to within
a 350-kb region of the immunoglobulin heavy chain gene cluster (IGH).
This breakpoint was used to localize markers D14S20 and D14S23, previ
ously thought to lie distal to IGH, to a more proximal location. The r
ing chromosome represents the smallest region of distal monosomy 14q y
et reported.