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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
X-linked alpha-thalassemia/mental retardation syndrome (
ATR
-X, OMIM 301040) is a syndromic form of X-linked
mental retardation
(XLMR). It is caused by a mutation in the ATRX gene, which is also involved in other syndromic forms of XLMR as well as in non-syndromic XLMR, both in males and in females. To analyze the full range of disease-causing mutations for genetic counseling and to establish phenotype-genotype correlations, we have established a new screening method for mutations in the ATRX gene, which uses mismatch-specific endonuclease. We applied this method to confirm 13 known mutations in our patients, some of which have been difficult to be demonstrated by conventional denaturing high-performance liquid chromatography. Furthermore, we found four additional mutations in four
ATR
-X patients whose clinical diagnosis had not been confirmed at the molecular level. In this method, experimental conditions do not need to be altered depending on mutation sites, and it should be the alternative method for mutation screening.
...
PMID:A new detection method for ATRX gene mutations using a mismatch-specific endonuclease. 1676 62
Extreme skewing of X-chromosome inactivation (XCI) is rare in the normal female population but is observed frequently in carriers of some X-linked mutations. Recently, it has been shown that various forms of X-linked
mental retardation
(XLMR) have a strong association with skewed XCI in female carriers, but the mechanisms underlying this skewing are unknown.
ATR
-X syndrome, caused by mutations in a ubiquitously expressed, chromatin-associated protein, provides a clear example of XLMR in which phenotypically normal female carriers virtually all have highly skewed XCI biased against the X chromosome that harbors the mutant allele. Here, we have used a mouse model to understand the processes causing skewed XCI. In female mice heterozygous for a null Atrx allele, we found that XCI is balanced early in embryogenesis but becomes skewed over the course of development, because of selection favoring cells expressing the wild-type Atrx allele. Unexpectedly, selection does not appear to be the result of general cellular-viability defects in Atrx-deficient cells, since it is restricted to specific stages of development and is not ongoing throughout the life of the animal. Instead, there is evidence that selection results from independent tissue-specific effects. This illustrates an important mechanism by which skewed XCI may occur in carriers of XLMR and provides insight into the normal role of ATRX in regulating cell fate.
...
PMID:Defining the cause of skewed X-chromosome inactivation in X-linked mental retardation by use of a mouse model. 1750 31
ATR
-X syndrome is a rare syndromic X-linked
mental retardation
disorder. We report that some of the patients suspected of
ATR
-X carry large intragenic duplications in the ATRX gene, leading to an absence of ATRX mRNA and of the protein. These findings underscore the need for including quantitative analyses to mutation analysis of the ATRX gene.
...
PMID:Partial duplications of the ATRX gene cause the ATR-X syndrome. 1757 72
Alpha thalassemia retardation associated with chromosome16 (
ATR
-16 syndrome) is defined as a contiguous gene syndrome resulting from haploinsufficiency of the alpha-globin gene cluster and genes involved in
mental retardation
(MR). To date, only few cases have been described which result from pure monosomy for a deletion of 16p. In most of these cases the deletion was identified by densitometric analysis of Southern blot results or by Fluorescent In Situ Hybridization analysis, and these alterations have not been mapped in detail. In this study, we have fine mapped deletions causing alpha-thalassemia within 2 Mb from the telomere of 16p by multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA). We have developed a rapid and simple test for high resolution mapping of rearrangements involving the tip of the short arm of chromosome 16 by incorporating 62 MLPA probes spaced approximately 10-200 kb over a region of 2 Mb from the telomere. One deletion of approximately 900 kb without MR was identified in addition to three de novo deletions varying between 1.5 and 2 Mb causing
ATR
-16 in three patients having mild MR and alpha-thalassemia. Two were found by chance to be
ATR
-16 because they were included in a study to search for telomeric loss in MR and not by hematological analysis. This would plead for more alertness when a persistent microcytic hypochromic anemia at normal ferritin levels is observed as suggestive for the
ATR
-16 syndrome. The region on chromosome 16p for which haploinsufficiency leads to the dysmorphic features and MR typical for
ATR
-16, has been narrowed down to a 800 kb region localized between 0.9 and 1.7 Mb from the telomere.
...
PMID:Refinement of the genetic cause of ATR-16. 1759 30
The chromatin-associated protein ATRX was originally identified because mutations in the ATRX gene cause a severe form of syndromal X-linked
mental retardation
associated with alpha-thalassemia. Half of all of the disease-associated missense mutations cluster in a cysteine-rich region in the N terminus of ATRX. This region was named the ATRX-DNMT3-DNMT3L (ADD) domain, based on sequence homology with a family of DNA methyltransferases. Here, we report the solution structure of the ADD domain of ATRX, which consists of an N-terminal GATA-like zinc finger, a plant homeodomain finger, and a long C-terminal alpha-helix that pack together to form a single globular domain. Interestingly, the alpha-helix of the GATA-like finger is exposed and highly basic, suggesting a DNA-binding function for ATRX. The disease-causing mutations fall into two groups: the majority affect buried residues and hence affect the structural integrity of the ADD domain; another group affects a cluster of surface residues, and these are likely to perturb a potential protein interaction site. The effects of individual point mutations on the folding state and stability of the ADD domain correlate well with the levels of mutant ATRX protein in patients, providing insights into the molecular pathophysiology of
ATR
-X syndrome.
...
PMID:Structural consequences of disease-causing mutations in the ATRX-DNMT3-DNMT3L (ADD) domain of the chromatin-associated protein ATRX. 1760 77
ATRX is a SWI/SNF-like chromatin remodeling protein mutated in several X-linked
mental retardation
syndromes. Gene inactivation studies in mice demonstrate that ATRX is an essential protein and suggest that patient mutations likely retain partial activity. ATRX associates with the nuclear matrix, pericentromeric heterochromatin, and promyelocytic leukemia nuclear bodies (PML-NBs) in a speckled nuclear staining pattern. Here, we used GFP-ATRX fusion proteins to identify the specific domains of ATRX necessary for subnuclear targeting and the effect of patient mutations on this localization. We identified two functional nuclear localization signals (NLSs) and two domains that target ATRX to nuclear speckles. One of the latter domains is responsible for targeting ATRX to PML-NBs. Surprisingly, this domain encompassed motifs IV-VI of the SNF2 domain suggesting that in addition to chromatin remodeling, it may also have a role in subnuclear targeting. More importantly, four different patient mutations within this domain resulted in an approximately 80% reduction in the number of transfected cells with ATRX nuclear speckles and PML colocalization. These results demonstrate that patient mutations have a dramatic effect on subnuclear targeting to PML-NBs. Moreover, these findings support the hypothesis that ATRX patient mutations represent functional hypomorphs and suggest that loss of proper targeting to PML-NBs is an important contributor to the pathogenesis of the
ATR
-X syndrome.
...
PMID:Patient mutations alter ATRX targeting to PML nuclear bodies. 1795 25
An 8-year-old Caucasian girl presented with mild dysmorphic features and intellectual disability (ID) affecting multiple spheres. Dysmorphisms included a high forehead with up-slanting palpebral fissures, prominent nasal root and bridge, flattened maxilla, high-arched palate, and anterior frenulum. Structural brain anomalies included reduced periventricular white matter volume and thin corpus callosum. The presence of HbH bodies and her clinical presentation raised suspicion for autosomal alpha-thalassemia
mental retardation
syndrome (
ATR
-16). Whole-genome array analysis at 1 Mb resolution was performed, which revealed a sub-microscopic loss of 16p involving clones RP11-344L6 at 0.1 Mb, RP1-121I4 at 0.2 Mb and RP11-334D3 at 1 Mb. FISH confirmed deletion (del) of the terminal clone (RP1-121I4) on 16pter, which was de novo in origin. The more proximal clone RP11-334D3 (at 1 Mb) showed diminished FISH signal intensity on one of the homologues, suggesting that one breakpoint occurred within this clone. Quantitative PCR (qPCR) confirmed a de novo deletion encompassing SOX8 (at 0.97 Mb).
ATR
-16 is characterized by ID with mild, nonspecific dysmorphic features, and is associated with terminal del16p (MIM No. 141750). Cases of isolated monosomy for 16p are rarely described; such descriptions help to delineate the syndrome in the absence of confounding karyotypic anomalies. We describe detailed molecular cytogenetic and clinical findings relating to a subject with
ATR
-16.
...
PMID:Phenotype-genotype characterization of alpha-thalassemia mental retardation syndrome due to isolated monosomy of 16p13.3. 1807 5
Fragile X
mental retardation
syndrome is a repeat expansion disease caused by expansion of a CGG.CCG-repeat tract in the 5' UTR of the FMR1 gene. In humans, small expansions occur more frequently on paternal transmission while large expansions are exclusively maternal in origin. It has been suggested that expansion is the result of aberrant DNA replication, repair or recombination. To distinguish amongst these possibilities we crossed mice containing 120 CGG.CCG-repeats in the 5' UTR of the mouse Fmr1 gene to mice with mutations in
ATR
, a protein important in the cellular response to stalled replication forks and bulky DNA lesions. We show here that
ATR
heterozygosity results in increased expansion rates of maternally, but not paternally, transmitted alleles. In addition, age-related somatic expansions occurred in mice of both genders that were not seen in
ATR
wild-type animals. Some
ATR
-sensitive expansion occurs in postmitotic cells including haploid gametes suggesting that aberrant DNA repair is responsible. Our data suggest that two mechanisms of repeat expansion exist that may explain the small and large expansions seen in humans. In addition, our data provide an explanation for the maternal bias of large expansions in humans and the lower incidence of these expansions in mice.
...
PMID:ATR protects the genome against CGG.CCG-repeat expansion in Fragile X premutation mice. 1816 Apr 12
ATRX belongs to the SNF2 family of proteins, many of which have been demonstrated to have chromatin remodeling activity. Constitution mutations in the X-encoded gene give rise to alpha thalassemia
mental retardation
(
ATR
-X) syndrome and a variety of related conditions that are often associated with profound developmental delay, facial dysmorphism, genital abnormalities, and alpha thalassemia. Acquired mutations in ATRX are observed in the preleukemic condition alpha thalassemia myelodysplastic syndrome (ATMDS). Mutations in ATRX have been shown to perturb gene expression and DNA methylation. This is a comprehensive report of 127 mutations including 32 reported here for the first time. Missense mutations are shown to cluster in the two main functional domains. The truncating mutations appear to be "rescued" to some degree and so it appears likely that most if not all constitutional ATRX mutations are hypomorphs.
...
PMID:Mutations in the chromatin-associated protein ATRX. 1840 79
Recent work in the alpha thalassaemia field has started to provide some indication of the mechanisms involved in the very high frequency of the different forms of alpha thalassaemia among the populations of tropical countries, and, at the same time, is starting to define at least some of the mechanisms for its remarkable phenotypic heterogeneity. These diseases continue to provide extremely valuable models for the better understanding of the regulation of the alpha globin genes, and for human molecular pathology in general. The much less common disorders,
ATR
-16 and
ATR
-X are also providing valuable information about the spectrum of molecular lesions associated with different forms of
mental retardation
and about the molecular mechanisms involved in their varying phenotypes.
...
PMID:The alpha thalassaemias. 1902 Aug 5
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