Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (mental retardation)
15,878 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The purpose of the National Exposure Registry is to assess the long-term health consequences to a general population from long-term, low-level exposures to specific substances in the environment. This study investigates the health outcomes of 1,143 persons (1,127 living, 16 deceased) living in south central Texas who had documented environmental exposure to benzene (up to 66ppb) in tap water. As with all subregistries, face-to-face interviews were used to collect self-reported information for 25 general health status questions. Using computer-assisted telephone interviewing, the same health questions were asked 1 year (Followup 1, F1) and 2 years later (Followup 2, F2). The health outcome rates for Baseline and Followup 1 and 2 data collections for the Benzene Subregistry were compared with national norms, that is, the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) rates. For at least one of the three reporting periods, specific age and sex groups of the Benzene Subregistry population reported more adverse health outcomes when compared with the NHIS population, including anemia and other blood disorders, ulcers, gall bladder trouble, and stomach or intestinal problems, stroke, urinary tract disorders, skin rashes, diabetes, kidney disease, and respiratory allergies. Statistically significant deficits for the Benzene Subregistry population overall were found for asthma, emphysema, or chronic bronchitis; arthritis, rheumatism, or other joint disorders; hearing impairment; and speech impairment. No statistically significant differences between the two populations were seen for the outcomes hypertension; liver disease; mental retardation; or cancer. These results do not identify a causal relationship between benzene exposure and adverse health effects; however, they do reinforce the need for continued followup of registrants.
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PMID:The National Exposure Registry: analyses of health outcomes from the benzene subregistry. 956 45

CBP and its homolog p300 are large nuclear molecules that coordinate a variety of transcriptional pathways with chromatin remodeling. They interact with transcriptional activators as well as repressors, direct chromatin-mediated transcription, function in TP53-mediated apoptosis, and participate in terminal differentiation of certain tissue types. Recent evidence suggests that the demand for CBP/p300 is greater than the supply, and that competition for CBP/p300 might play an important role in cell growth regulation. Alterations of the human CBP gene have been implicated in hematological malignancies as well as in congenital malformation and mental retardation. Likewise, the p300 gene has been recently implicated in leukemia and mutations in both alleles have been observed in gastric and colorectal carcinomas. The role of these proteins in human disease coupled with biochemical evidence suggests that CBP and p300 are tumor suppressor proteins essential in cell-cycle control, cellular differentiation and human development.
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PMID:Conjunction dysfunction: CBP/p300 in human disease. 961 1

GDP-dissociation inhibitors (GDIs) play a primary role in modulating the activity of GTPases. We recently reported the identification of a new GDI for the Rho-related GTPases named RhoGDIgamma. This gene is now designated ARHGDIG by HUGO. Here, in a detailed analysis of tissue expression of ARHGDIG, we observe high levels in the entire brain, with regional variations. The mRNA is also present at high levels in kidney and pancreas and at moderate levels in spinal cord, stomach, and pituitary gland. In other tissues examined, the mRNA levels are very low (lung, trachea, small intestine, colon, placenta) or undetectable. RT-PCR analysis of total RNA isolated from exocrine pancreas and islets shows that the gene is expressed in both tissues. We also report the genomic structure of ARHGDIG. The gene spans over 4 kb and is organized into six exons and five introns. The upstream region lacks a canonical TATA box and contains several putative binding sites for ubiquitous and tissue-specific factors active in central nervous system development. Using FISH, we have mapped the gene to chromosome band 16p13.3. This band is rich in deletion mutants of genes involved in several human diseases, notably polycystic kidney disease, alpha-thalassemia, tuberous sclerosis, mental retardation, and cancer. The promoter structure and the chromosomal location of RhoGDIgamma suggest its importance and underscore the need for further investigation into its biology.
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PMID:Human ARHGDIG, a GDP-dissociation inhibitor for Rho proteins: genomic structure, sequence, expression analysis, and mapping to chromosome 16p13.3. 978 82

Costello syndrome is a well delineated mental retardation syndrome of unknown aetiology in which the occurrence of benign tumours, especially papillomata, is recognised. We report two children in whom the diagnosis of Costello syndrome was made in the first months of life, who both developed a retroperitoneal embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma. Although not previously reported, the occurrence of this relatively uncommon childhood tumour in two girls with Costello syndrome suggests that an increased risk of malignancy may be part of this condition. The genetic basis of this susceptibility requires further clarification.
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PMID:Costello syndrome: two cases with embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma. 1042 28

We report on a 7-year-old boy with mosaic variegated aneuploidy (MVA) who developed embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma of the soft palate. This patient is the 11th case report of MVA and represents further documentation of the true existence of this rare mitotic mutant. Clinical findings share similarities to those previously described patients including microcephaly and growth retardation as the two most common abnormalities. Notably, mental retardation is not universally present. Results of serial cytogenetic analyses performed on somatic and neoplastic tissues are reviewed and compared with those of other previously reported patients. We postulate that mosaic variegated aneuploidy is causally related to the development of rhabdomyosarcoma in our patient. This is the first report of a patient with MVA who developed cancer and suggests that these patients may be at risk for malignancy and require long-term follow-up and cancer surveillance.
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PMID:Child with mosaic variegated aneuploidy and embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma. 991 37

Of 40 Wilms tumors with chromosome abnormalities, 6 were hypodiploid, 10 were pseudodiploid, 7 were hyperdiploid with 47 to 49 chromosomes, and 17 were hyperdiploid with 50 or more chromosomes, mostly including +12. WT1 deletions/mutations were found in one hypodiploid, eight pseudodiploid, and one hyperdiploid (47-49 chromosomes) tumor, but in none of the hyperdiploid (> or =50 chromosomes) tumors. Of the 10 tumors with WT1 abnormalities, 6 had a homozygous WT1 deletion, 1 had a nonsense WT1 mutation and loss of heterozygosity at 11p, 1 had an intragenic hemizygous WT1 deletion without detectable WT1 mutation, and 2, which occurred in Wilms tumor-aniridia-genitourinary abnormalities-mental retardation syndrome patients, had a hemizygous deletion and a missense or frameshift mutation of WT1. Six of the nine tumors with homozygous or hemizygous WT1 deletions had chromosome aberrations involving chromosome band 11p13 in one of the two chromosomes 11. While one hypodiploid and one pseudodiploid patient died of the disease, and one hyperdiploid (47-49 chromosomes) patient was alive in nonremission, all hyperdiploid (> or =50 chromosomes) patients had no evidence of disease at the last follow-up. Our data show that chromosome aberrations are closely correlated to WT1 abnormalities and suggest that hyperdiploid (> or =50 chromosomes) Wilms tumors may be characterized by the absence of WT1 abnormalities and possibly also by a favorable prognosis.
Genes Chromosomes Cancer 1999 May
PMID:Correlation of chromosome abnormalities with presence or absence of WT1 deletions/mutations in Wilms tumor. 1022 36

Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by epilepsy, mental retardation and hamartomatous lesions in multiple organs. It has been shown that the genes responsible for TSC, TSC1 and TSC2, act as tumor suppressors, but the mechanism of hamartomatous growth in several tissues is not completely understood. The TSC hamartomas are essentially benign and they rarely progress to malignant tumors. In this report, we cultured the angiofibroma stroma cells of three adult TSC patients and compared these cells with normal skin fibroblasts for their proliferative capacity, cell morphology and mitotic cycle using a stain for microtubules and the expression of the senescent associated beta-galactosidase (SA beta-Gal). Cultured angiofibroma stroma cells from TSC patients displayed several characteristics observed in human senescent fibroblasts; a low proliferative capacity, an increase in cell size, increased binucleated cells in association with abnormal cytokinesis and increased SA beta-Gal positives. Growth of facial angiofibromas in TSC may be caused by a gain in enhanced sensitivity toward some of the potential mitogens and forced multiplication without loss of the cellular senescent program; this may be the reason why TSC hamartomas rarely progress to malignancy and why the growths are limited to a finite size.
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PMID:Cellular senescence of angiofibroma stroma cells from patients with tuberous sclerosis. 1037 5

Pre-operational health survey was conducted around Kakrapar Atomic Power Station (KAPS) during 1991-92, just one year before the first Unit of KAPS commenced operation on September 3, 1992. Total seventeen villages were selected around KAPS, which were divided into four clusters. Total population was 14,976, of which 7540 were male and 7436 were female. Door to door 100% survey was conducted with the help of Medical doctor. Health survey was conducted specially to find out the prevalence of radiation related diseases such as congenital deformity, mental retardation, cataract, goiter (grade II & IV), reproductive disorders, and cancer, besides study of morbidity pattern and age and sex specific deaths. Results revealed that prevalent diseases pattern fell well within the range of natural incidences of diseases of rural population.
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PMID:Pre-operational health status of a rural community living around the Kakrapar Atomic Power Station. 1038 28

Germline mutations in the tumour suppressor gene PTEN have been implicated in two hamartoma syndromes that exhibit some clinical overlap, Cowden syndrome (CS) and Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome (BRR). PTEN maps to 10q23 and encodes a dual specificity phosphatase, a substrate of which is phosphatidylinositol 3,4,5-triphosphate, a phospholipid in the phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase pathway. CS is characterized by multiple hamartomas and an increased risk of benign and malignant disease of the breast, thyroid and central nervous system, whilst the presence of cancer has not been formally documented in BRR. The partial clinical overlap in these two syndromes is exemplified by the hallmark features of BRR: macrocephaly and multiple lipomas, the latter of which occur in a minority of individuals with CS. Additional features observed in BRR, which may also occur in a minority of CS patients, include Hashimoto's thyroiditis, vascular malformations and mental retardation. Pigmented macules of the glans penis, delayed motor development and neonatal or infant onset are noted only in BRR. In this study, constitutive DNA samples from 43 BRR individuals comprising 16 sporadic and 27 familial cases, 11 of which were families with both CS and BRR, were screened for PTEN mutations. Mutations were identified in 26 of 43 (60%) BRR cases. Genotype-phenotype analyses within the BRR group suggested a number of correlations, including the association of PTEN mutation and cancer or breast fibroadenoma in any given CS, BRR or BRR/CS overlap family ( P = 0.014), and, in particular, truncating mutations were associated with the presence of cancer and breast fibroadenoma in a given family ( P = 0.024). Additionally, the presence of lipomas was correlated with the presence of PTEN mutation in BRR patients ( P = 0.028). In contrast to a prior report, no significant difference in mutation status was found in familial versus sporadic cases of BRR ( P = 0.113). Comparisons between BRR and a previously studied group of 37 CS families suggested an increased likelihood of identifying a germline PTEN mutation in families with either CS alone or both CS and BRR when compared with BRR alone ( P = 0.002). Among CS, BRR and BRR/CS overlap families that are PTEN mutation positive, the mutation spectra appear similar. Thus, PTEN mutation-positive CS and BRR may be different presentations of a single syndrome and, hence, both should receive equal attention with respect to cancer surveillance.
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PMID:PTEN mutation spectrum and genotype-phenotype correlations in Bannayan-Riley-Ruvalcaba syndrome suggest a single entity with Cowden syndrome. 1040 Sep 93

We report a male infant with multiple congenital anomalies and mosaic variegated aneuploidy; a rare cytogenetic abnormality characterized by mosaicism for several different aneuploidies involving many different chromosomes. He had prenatal-onset growth retardation, microcephaly, dysmorphic face, seizures, hypotonia, feeding difficulty, and developmental delay. In addition, he developed bilateral Wilms tumors. Neuroradiological examination revealed Dandy-Walker malformation and hypoplasia of the cerebral hemisphere and pons. Cytogenetic analysis revealed various multiple numerical aneuploidies in blood lymphocytes, fibroblasts, and bone marrow cells, together with premature centromere division (PCD). Peripheral blood chromosome analysis from his parents also showed PCD, but no aneuploid cells. The clinical phenotype and multiple aneuploidies of the patient may be a consequence of the homozygous PCD trait inherited from his parents. Comparison with previously reported cases of multiple aneuploidy suggests that mosaic variegated aneuploidy with PCD may be a clinically recognizable syndrome with major phenotypes being mental retardation, microcephaly, structural brain anomalies (including Dandy-Walker malformation), and possible cancer predisposition.
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PMID:Syndrome of microcephaly, Dandy-Walker malformation, and Wilms tumor caused by mosaic variegated aneuploidy with premature centromere division (PCD): report of a new case and review of the literature. 1042 59


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