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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Trichothiodystrophy (TTD) is a rare, autosomal recessive disorder characterized by sulfur-deficient brittle hair and nails,
mental retardation
, impaired sexual development, and ichthyosis. Photosensitivity has been reported in approximately 50% of the cases, but no skin cancer is associated with TTD. Virtually all photosensitive TTD patients have a deficiency in the nucleotide excision repair (NER) of UV-induced DNA damage that is indistinguishable from that of xeroderma pigmentosum (XP) complementation group D (XP-D) patients. DNA repair defects in XP-D are associated with two additional, quite different diseases; XP, a sun-sensitive and cancer-prone repair disorder, and Cockayne syndrome (CS), a photosensitive condition characterized by physical and
mental retardation
and wizened facial appearance. One photosensitive TTD case constitutes a new repair-deficient complementation group, TTD-A. Remarkably, both TTD-A and XP-D defects are associated with subunits of TFIIH, a basal transcription factor with a second function in DNA repair. Thus, mutations in TFIIH components may, on top of a repair defect, also cause transcriptional insufficiency, which may explain part of the non-XP clinical features of TTD. Besides XPD and TTDA, the
XPB
gene product is also part of TFIIH. To date, three patients with the remarkable conjunction of XP and CS but not TTD have been assigned to XP complementation group B (XP-B). Here we present the characterization of the NER defect in two mild TTD patients (TTD6VI and TTD4VI) and confirm the assignment to X-PB. The causative mutation was found to be a single base substitution resulting in a missense mutation (T119P) in a region of the
XPB
protein completely conserved in yeast, Drosophila, mouse, and man. These findings define a third TTD complementation group, extend the clinical heterogeneity associated with XP-B, stress the exclusive relationship between TTD and mutations in subunits of repair/transcription factor TFIIH, and strongly support the concept of "transcription syndromes."
...
PMID:A mutation in the XPB/ERCC3 DNA repair transcription gene, associated with trichothiodystrophy. 901 5
Cockayne s syndrome is a genetic disorder with a recessive autosomal inheritance, described first by Cockayne in 1936. Patients with this syndrome present failure to thrive, short stature, premature aging, neurological alterations, photosensitivity, delayed eruption of the primary teeth, congenitally absent of some permanent teeth, partial macrodontia, atrophy of the alveolar process and caries. It could be caused by two gene mutations, CNK1 (ERCC8) and ERCC6, located on the 5 and 10 chromosomes respectively, causing two variations of Cockayne s syndrome, CS-A, secondary to a ERCC8 mutation and CS-B with ERCC6 mutation, the last one causes hypersensitivity to the ultraviolet light secondary to a DNA repair defect. The syndrome is also associated with mutations of the
XPB
, XPD and XPG genes. In this report we present a 9 year and 4 month old patient. He had a height of 94 cm, weight of 8.6 Kg, head circumference of 42 cm. and blood pressure of 120/80. Cachectic habitus, kyphosis, microcephaly, oval face, sunken eyes, a thin and beaklike nose, lack of subcutaneous facial fat (especially in the middle of the face), and large ears give the patient a birdlike appearance. It is notorious the photosensitivity in all the sun-exposed skin. The patient also displays delayed psychomotor skills and
mental retardation
. In the oral cavity we found deficient hygiene, gingivitis, cervical caries, enamel hipoplasia, abnormal position of the upper and inferior lateral incisors, macrodontia of the upper central teeth, the left one presented a caries. In the x-ray we observed congenital absence of 14, 23 and 24 teeth and mandibular hipoplasia. The aim of this review is to show the dentistry community the characteristics of the Cockayne s syndrome by means of a clinical case.
...
PMID:Cockayne's syndrome: a case report. Literature review. 1664 59
Trichothiodystrophy (TTD) is an autosomal recessive disorder with symptoms affecting several tissues and organs. The most relevant features are hair abnormalities, physical and
mental retardation
, ichthyosis, signs of premature aging and cutaneous photosensitivity. The clinical spectrum of TTD varies widely from patients with only brittle, fragile hair to patients with the most severe neuroectodermal symptoms. To date, four genes have been identified as responsible for TTD: XPD,
XPB
, p8/TTDA, and TTDN1. Whereas the function of TTDN1 is still unknown, the former three genes encode subunits of TFIIH, the multiprotein complex involved in basal and activated transcription and in nucleotide excision repair (NER). Ongoing investigations on TTD are elucidating not only the pathogenesis of the disease, which appears to be mainly related to transcriptional impairment, but also the modalities of NER and transcription in human cells and how TFIIH operates in these two fundamental cellular processes.
...
PMID:Trichothiodystrophy: from basic mechanisms to clinical implications. 1993 93
Trichothiodystrophy (TTD) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by sulfur-deficient brittle hair complicated with ichthyosis, physical and
mental retardation
, and proneness to infections. Approximately half of TTD patients exhibit cutaneous photosensitivity because of the defect of nucleotide excision repair. Three genes,
XPB
, XPD and TTDA, have been identified as causative genes of photosensitive TTD. These three genes are components of basal transcription factor IIH. Most TTD cases have been reported in Europe and North America. We report a severely affected Japanese TTD patient with XPD mutations. Interestingly, his father has ichthyotic skin. The alteration in the paternal allele was a nucleotide substitution leading to Arg-722 to Trp (R722W), as previously reported in TTD patients. The other alteration in the maternal allele was a novel 3-bp deletion at nucleotides 67-69, resulting in the deletion of Ser-23, which is located upstream of helicase motif I and is the closest to the N-terminal end of XPD in reported mutations. The expression study showed that the two alterations were causative mutations for TTD. In Asia, it is likely that there are TTD patients who have not been diagnosed.
...
PMID:A Japanese trichothiodystrophy patient with XPD mutations. 2094 42