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)

Toriello-Carey syndrome is characterized by agenesis of the corpus callosum, telecanthus, short palpebral fissures, Robin sequence, abnormal ears, cardiac anomalies, and hypotonia. We describe two patients with Toriello-Carey syndrome and call attention to an unbalanced sex ratio. The first patient, a male, was born at term by Cesarean section and manifests micrognathia, cleft soft palate, hypoplastic right ear, anotia on the left side, cerebellar vermis hypoplasia, hydrocephalus, agenesis of the corpus callosum, and hypoplastic left heart. He died 2 days after birth. The second patient is the male sib of a patient reported previously [Am J Med Genet 42: 374-376; 1992]. He had large fontanelles, telecanthus, a short nose, small and malformed ears, micrognathia, a large ventricular septal defect, and pulmonary stenosis. At age 8 months he has growth retardation and developmental delay. A sister is unaffected. Review documented eight other patients with Toriello-Carey syndrome, six of whom were male. The two female patients are less severely affected and are still alive. Of the other male patients, all are deceased except one who is still alive at age 5 years; he has severe growth retardation (-3 SD), mental retardation (DQ44), severe speech delay, and characteristic anomalies. The predominance of affected males and the milder phenotype in the female patients suggests an X-linked gene or sex influenced gene.
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PMID:Toriello-Carey syndrome: evidence for X-linked inheritance. 1056 85

Toriello-Carey syndrome (TCS; OMIM 217980) is a multiple congenital anomaly syndrome characterized by the common manifestations of corpus callosum agenesis, cardiac defects, cleft palate/Robin sequence, hypotonia, mental retardation, postnatal growth retardation and distinctive facial dysmorphology (including micrognathia, telecanthus, small nose and full cheeks). Both autosomal recessive and X-linked inheritance have been proposed, but chromosomal abnormalities involving disparate loci have also been detected in a small number of cases. We report a patient with classical features of TCS and an apparently balanced de novo translocation between chromosomes 2 and 14 [46,XY,t(2;14)(q33;q22)]. Molecular characterization revealed direct interruption of the special AT-rich sequence-binding protein-2 (SATB2) gene at the 2q33.1 translocation breakpoint, while the 14q22.3 breakpoint was not intragenic. SATB2 mutation or deletion has been associated with both isolated and syndromic facial clefting; however, an association with TCS has not been reported. SATB2 functions broadly as a transcription regulator, and its expression patterns suggest an important role in craniofacial and central nervous system development, making it a plausible candidate gene for TCS.
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PMID:Toriello-Carey syndrome in a patient with a de novo balanced translocation [46,XY,t(2;14)(q33;q22)] interrupting SATB2. 1917 Jul 18

Toriello-Carey syndrome (TCS) is a multiple congenital anomaly syndrome of unknown etiopathogenesis with characteristic findings including corpus callosum defects, minor facial dysmorphisms, mental retardation, postnatal growth delays, cardiac defects, limb anomalies and genitourinary defects in affected males. This report describes two siblings with features of the TCS in whom array comparative genomic hybridization detected both a 3q29 microduplication as well as a 6p25 microdeletion due to an unbalanced translocation inherited from the father. Though neither microscopic copy number imbalance has been previously attributed to the TCS, this report supports the assertion that roughly 25% of patients with presumed TCS by phenotype may harbor underlying cytogenetic aberrations. Further, this report maintains that, until the specific causative gene is identified, a diagnosis of TCS be reserved for those patients who have not only the salient clinical features but also normal genetic studies that should include microarray.
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PMID:Siblings with phenotypic overlap with Toriello-Carey syndrome and complex cytogenetic imbalances including 3q29 microduplication and 6p25 microdeletion: Review of the literature and additional evidence for genetic heterogeneity. 2110 91