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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report on the association of a gastric carcinoma and a constitutional deletion of the short arm of chromosome 18 in a 14-year-old patient. The phenotype of the patient, including microcephaly, ptosis, micrognathia, tetralogy of Fallot, and
mental retardation
, fits well with previously reported cases of del(18p); she also showed a positive serology against Helicobacter pylori. The comparison of the alleles of polymorphic loci located on the short arm of chromosome 18 between the patient and her parents showed a maternal origin of the abnormal chromosome. Loss of heterozygosity (LOH) for loci located in the long arm of chromosome 18 is a frequent event in gastric carcinomas; it was observed in the tumoral mass of our patient and again, the alleles lost were of maternal origin. We postulate that the constitutional chromosomal abnormality may have favored the loss of the abnormal chromosome in some cells and that the loss of the deleted chromosome 18 (demonstrated by LOH for this chromosome in the tumoral mass) has been an early step in the pathogenesis of the gastric carcinoma of our patient with Helicobacter pylori infection acting as a cofactor.
Cancer
Genet Cytogenet 1999 Aug
PMID:Early onset of gastric carcinoma and constitutional deletion of 18p. 1045 56
A boy with characteristic facial features, pulmonary valvular stenosis, ectodermal abnormalities, growth failure, and
mental retardation
was admitted for intestinal occlusion at 20 months of age. Clinical findings were consistent with a diagnosis of cardio-facio-cutaneous syndrome (CFC-s), and a huge abdominal mass was evident on computed tomography scan. A biopsy was performed, and embryonal rhabdomyosarcoma was diagnosed. Molecular analysis was performed by reverse transcription (RT) polymerase chain reaction (PCR) on tumor RNA to seek the chimerical transcript of the most common soft tissue sarcoma translocations and analyze neurofibromatosis 1 (NF1) gene expression. Translocations involving 1;13, 2;13, and 11;22 were not found, and the specific transcripts of the NF1 gene were present. Chemotherapy was implemented, but the child died 7 months later of tumor progression. Few patients with CFC-s have been described, and their follow-up is not well known. The association of CFC-s with rhabdomyosarcoma has not been reported previously, but other neoplasms have been reported in patients with Noonan syndrome, a condition similar to CFC-s. More observations are needed, but this and other reports suggest there could be a higher risk of
malignancy
in patients with syndromes in the Noonan phenotype category.
...
PMID:Rhabdomyosarcoma in a patient with cardio-facio-cutaneous syndrome. 1113 27
PTEN/MMACI/TEP1, a tumor suppressor gene located on 10q23.3, encodes an almost ubiquitously expressed dual-specificity phosphatase. Germline mutations in PTEN have been found in the majority of cases of sporadic and familial Cowden syndrome (CS), an autosomal dominant inherited
cancer
syndrome characterised by multiple hamartomas and benign and malignant disease of the thyroid and breast. Interestingly, germline mutations in PTEN have also been found in about 50% of a related but distinct disorder, Bannayan-Ruvalcaba-Riley syndrome (BRR), which is characterised by neonatal-onset macrocephaly,
mental retardation
, Hashimoto's thyroiditis, lipomatosis, haemangiomas, hamartomatous polyps, and pigmented macules of the glans penis. Somatic PTEN mutation has been described to a greater or lesser extent in various benign and
malignant tumor
types. Somatic deletions have been described in follicular adenomas of the thyroid and papillary thyroid carcinomas.
...
PMID:The role of PTEN, a phosphatase gene, in inherited and sporadic nonmedullary thyroid tumors. 1054 86
The structure of a Nova protein K homology (KH) domain recognizing single-stranded RNA has been determined at 2.4 A resolution. Mammalian Nova antigens (1 and 2) constitute an important family of regulators of RNA metabolism in neurons, first identified using sera from
cancer
patients with the autoimmune disorder paraneoplastic opsoclonus-myoclonus ataxia (POMA). The structure of the third KH domain (KH3) of Nova-2 bound to a stem loop RNA resembles a molecular vise, with 5'-Ura-Cyt-Ade-Cyt-3' pinioned between an invariant Gly-X-X-Gly motif and the variable loop. Tetranucleotide recognition is supported by an aliphatic alpha helix/beta sheet RNA-binding platform, which mimics 5'-Ura-Gua-3' by making Watson-Crick-like hydrogen bonds with 5'-Cyt-Ade-3'. Sequence conservation suggests that fragile X
mental retardation
results from perturbation of RNA binding by the FMR1 protein.
...
PMID:Sequence-specific RNA binding by a Nova KH domain: implications for paraneoplastic disease and the fragile X syndrome. 1067 14
Costello syndrome is characterized by
mental retardation
, loose skin, coarse face, skeletal deformations, cardiomyopathy, and predisposition to numerous
malignancies
. The genetic origin of Costello syndrome has not yet been defined. Using immunohistochemistry and metabolic labeling with [3H]-valine, we have established that cultured skin fibroblasts obtained from patients with Costello syndrome did not assemble elastic fibers, despite an adequate synthesis of tropoelastin and normal deposition of the microfibrillar scaffold. We found that impaired production of elastic fibers by these fibroblasts is associated with a functional deficiency of the 67-kD elastin-binding protein (EBP), which is normally required to chaperone tropoelastin through the secretory pathways and to its extracellular assembly. Metabolic pulse labeling of the 67-kD EBP with radioactive serine and further chase of this tracer indicated that both normal fibroblasts and fibroblasts from patients with Costello syndrome initially synthesized comparable amounts of this protein; however, the fibroblasts from Costello syndrome patients quickly lost it into the conditioned media. Because the normal association between EBP and tropoelastin can be disrupted on contact with galactosugar-bearing moieties, and the fibroblasts from patients with Costello syndrome revealed an unusual accumulation of chondroitin sulfate-bearing proteoglycans (CD44 and biglycan), we postulate that a chondroitin sulfate may be responsible for shedding EBP from Costello cells and in turn for their impaired elastogenesis. This was further supported by the fact that exposure to chondroitinase ABC, an enzyme capable of chondroitin sulfate degradation, restored normal production of elastic fibers by fibroblasts from patients with Costello syndrome. We also present evidence that loss of EBP from fibroblasts of Costello syndrome patients is associated with an unusually high rate of cellular proliferation.
...
PMID:Decreased elastin deposition and high proliferation of fibroblasts from Costello syndrome are related to functional deficiency in the 67-kD elastin-binding protein. 1071 2
Chromosomal rearrangements involving the ends of chromosomes (telomeres) are emerging as an important cause of human genetic diseases. This review describes the development of first and second generation sets of telomere specific clones, together with advances in fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) technology, which have made the prospect of screening for telomeric rearrangements a realistic goal. Initial FISH studies using the telomere specific clones indicate that they will be a valuable diagnostic tool for the investigation of
mental retardation
, the characterisation of known abnormalities detected by conventional cytogenetic analysis, spontaneous recurrent miscarriages, infertility, haematological
malignancies
, and preimplantation diagnosis, as well as other fields of clinical interest. In addition, they may help investigate telomere structure and function and can be used in the identification of dosage sensitive genes involved in human genetic disease.
...
PMID:Perfect endings: a review of subtelomeric probes and their use in clinical diagnosis. 1085 Dec 49
RhoGEFs play an important role in various signaling cascades and are implicated in human conditions like
cancer
and
mental retardation
. A database search combined with screening of a human neuronal teratocarcinoma library identified two novel RhoGEFs, ARHGEF3 and ARHGEF4 (HGMW-approved symbols). The widely expressed ARHGEF3 transcript of 3561 nucleotides encodes a polypeptide of 526 amino acids with homology to NET1. The ARHGEF4 gene generates two transcripts of 3665 and 4000 nucleotides that translate into 720 amino acid residues. Expression of ARHGEF4 is restricted to brain and the encoded protein shows homology to collybistin. FISH analysis of genomic clones mapped ARHGEF3 to 3p13-21 and ARHGEF4 to 2q22.
...
PMID:Isolation of two novel human RhoGEFs, ARHGEF3 and ARHGEF4, in 3p13-21 and 2q22. 1087 12
Alstrom syndrome is a rare autosomal recessive disease; less than 60 cases have been reported. No Chinese patient with this disease has been reported previously in the literature. Here, we describe an 11-year-old Chinese boy with this condition. His elder sister also had Alstrom syndrome, and his father had non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. Both siblings had degenerative retinopathy, obesity,
mental retardation
, perceptive hearing loss, short stature, non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, nephropathy, hyperlipidemia, acanthosis nigricans, and hepatic dysfunction. The boy also developed acute lymphoblastic leukemia, which was confirmed by cytochemistry and immunophenotyping findings. He received chemotherapy and radiotherapy for the
malignancy
. The present case suggests that acute lymphoblastic leukemia may be coincident with or may be a previously undescribed systemic manifestation of Alstrom syndrome.
...
PMID:Acute lymphoblastic leukemia in one of two siblings with Alstrom syndrome. 1106 Oct 78
Fragile X syndrome is now a well established common clinical entity and most of those who are aware of the condition probably know that it takes its name from a rare fragile site (FRAXA) on the X chromosome. This is the best known fragile site and its clinical significance is clear. Similar, but a little less known is FRAXE, a fragile site close to that associated with fragile X syndrome, but in this case associated with a mild form of non-specific X-linked
mental retardation
. These are the only two fragile sites that are unequivocally of clinical significance. A fragile site within the CBL2 oncogene on chromosome 11 has been mapped very close to the deletion breakpoint in a handful of patients with Jacobsen syndrome. It is doubtful that parents with FRA11B are at increased risk of having children with Jacobsen syndrome, but this cannot be ruled out. The common fragile sites have been implicated in oncogenesis since shortly after their discovery in the early 1980s. While a couple of these are within genes that have been implicated in
cancer
it is unclear whether either the fragile sites, or the genes in which they are located are important in
cancer
. It may be that the common fragile sites are regions of genomic instability and that this instability is increased in malignant cells, analogous to the enhanced instability seen at microsatellite loci in a number of tumours. Since we all have the common fragile sites there is no suggestion that they give anyone an increased risk of developing malignant disease. In dealing with patients who are found to have fragile sites, other than FRAXA, FRAXE and possibly FRA11B, considerable reassurance can be given that they are not at increased risk of having children with congenital disease or developing disease themselves because of their fragile sites.
...
PMID:The clinical significance of fragile sites on human chromosomes. 1107 37
Alterations in homocysteine, methionine, folate, and/or B12 homeostasis have been associated with neural tube defects, cardiovascular disease, and
cancer
. Methionine synthase, one of only two mammalian enzymes known to require vitamin B12 as a cofactor, lies at the intersection of these metabolic pathways. This enzyme catalyzes the transfer of a methyl group from 5-methyl-tetrahydrofolate to homocysteine, generating tetrahydrofolate and methionine. Human patients with methionine synthase deficiency exhibit homocysteinemia, homocysteinuria, and hypomethioninemia. They suffer from megaloblastic anemia with or without some degree of neural dysfunction and
mental retardation
. To better study the pathophysiology of methionine synthase deficiency, we utilized gene-targeting technology to inactivate the methionine synthase gene in mice. On average, heterozygous knockout mice from an outbred background have slightly elevated plasma homocysteine and methionine compared to wild-type mice but seem to be otherwise indistinguishable. Homozygous knockout embryos survive through implantation but die soon thereafter. Nutritional supplementation during pregnancy was unable to rescue embryos that were completely deficient in methionine synthase. Whether any human patients with methionine synthase deficiency have a complete absence of enzyme activity is unclear. These results demonstrate the importance of this enzyme for early development in mice and suggest either that methionine synthase-deficient patients have residual methionine synthase activity or that humans have a compensatory mechanism that is absent in mice.
...
PMID:Targeted disruption of the methionine synthase gene in mice. 1115 93
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