This paper describes a molecular investigation of a woman with an apparent large pericentric inversion of chromosome 5, inv(5)(p14;q35), and one normal chromosome 5 and her child, who was born with cri-du-chat syndrome. The four chromosome 5 homologs from the proband and his mother were isolated in somatic cell hybrids, and their haplotypes were determined at nine loci polymorphic for restriction enzyme sites. The deleted chromosome in the proband was shown to carry alleles from both maternal homologs, verifying molecularly that a meiotic recombination event in the mother gave rise to her son's deleted chromosome 5. The single crossover was presumably near the centromere.