Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This paper gives the results of a needs assessment of a group of learning-disabled forensic patients from two Strategic Health Authority areas in the north of England. The patients were found to be a heterogeneous group with wide-ranging psychiatric needs. The majority were cared for outside their geographical area of origin, either in specialist
NHS
facilities or the independent sector. Those with an additional diagnosis of mental illness were most likely to be detained in
NHS
facilities within the region: a diagnosis of personality disorder was associated with placement in either a high secure setting or the independent sector. Individuals with a clinical diagnosis of
mental retardation
were most likely to be detained in services provided by specialist learning disability/mental health trusts out of area. There was a small group of females who were all placed outside the region. Offending behaviour was most likely to consist of violence against the person, sexual offences and arson. The majority assessed were felt to have long term needs. The study raised important implications for future provision of forensic services in the area, particularly the need to offer services with treatment programmes tailored to the needs of the population under review.
...
PMID:Needs assessment in forensic learning disability. 1589 41
Mutations in the
NHS
(Nance-Horan Syndrome) gene lead to severe congenital cataracts, dental defects and sometimes
mental retardation
.
NHS
encodes two protein isoforms,
NHS
-A and -1A that display cell-type dependent differential expression and localization. Here we demonstrate that of these two isoforms, the
NHS
-A isoform associates with the cell membrane in the presence of intercellular contacts and it immunoprecipitates with the tight junction protein ZO-1 in MDCK (Madin Darby Canine Kidney) epithelial cells and in neonatal rat lens. The
NHS
-1A isoform however is a cytoplasmic protein. Both Nhs isoforms are expressed during mouse development. Immunolabelling of developing mouse with the anti-
NHS
antibody that detects both isoforms revealed the protein in the developing head including the eye and brain. It was primarily expressed in epithelium including neural epithelium and certain vascular endothelium but only weakly expressed in mesenchymal cells. In the epithelium and vascular endothelium the protein associated with the cell membrane and co-localized with ZO-1, which indirectly indicates expression of the Nhs-A isoform in these structures. Membrane localization of the protein in the lens vesicle similarly supports Nhs-A expression. In conclusion, the
NHS
-A isoform of
NHS
is a novel interactor of ZO-1 and may have a role at tight junctions. This isoform is important in mammalian development especially of the organs in the head.
...
PMID:NHS-A isoform of the NHS gene is a novel interactor of ZO-1. 1944 4
Development and implementation of high-density DNA arrays demonstrated the important role of copy number changes on the X chromosome in the etiology of developmental delay and
mental retardation
(MR). We describe two unrelated patients with developmental delay due to similar interstitial duplications at Xp21-p22. The first patient is a 6-month-old male with multiple affected family members including many females. The second patient is a 5-year-old adopted female. In both patients, chromosome analysis and array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) showed duplications of overlapping regions at Xp21-p22. The duplicated segments contain numerous genes associated with MR, including AP1S2,
NHS
, CDKL5, RPS6KA3, SMS, and ARX. Except for developmental delay, there is little phenotypic overlap between the male and the female patient. Additionally, the female patient and affected female relatives of the male patient have variable severities of cognitive impairment, likely due to different X-inactivation patterns and effects of other, nonduplicated genes important for normal development. These cases illustrate that increased gene dosage of X-linked MR genes lead to cognitive impairment. Precise delineation of chromosome rearrangements by aCGH and identification of genes within duplicated segments helped in establishing genotype-phenotype correlations for each of our patients, in comparing them to each other, as well as with previously reported cases of Xp21-p22 duplications. However, we show that even with detailed molecular characterization, phenotype prediction remains challenging in patients with structural abnormalities of the X chromosome.
...
PMID:Clinical and molecular characterization of overlapping interstitial Xp21-p22 duplications in two unrelated individuals. 2035
X-linked
mental retardation
(XLMR) is a common, clinically complex and genetically heterogeneous disease arising from many mutations along the X chromosome. Although research during the past decade has identified >90 XLMR genes, many more remain uncharacterized. In this study, copy-number variations (CNVs) were screened in individuals with MR from 144 families by array-based comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) using a bacterial artificial chromosome-based X-tiling array. Candidate pathogenic CNVs (pCNVs) were detected in 10 families (6.9%). Five of the families had pCNVs involving known XLMR genes, duplication of Xq28 containing MECP2 in three families, duplication of Xp11.22-p11.23 containing FTSJ1 and PQBP1 in one family, and deletion of Xp11.22 bearing SHROOM4 in one family. New candidate pCNVs were detected in five families as follows: identical complex pCNVs involved in dup(X)(p22.2) and dup(X)(p21.3) containing part of REPS2,
NHS
and IL1RAPL1 in two unrelated families, duplication of Xp22.2 including part of FRMPD4, duplication of Xq21.1 including HDX and deletion of Xq24 noncoding region in one family, respectively. Both parents and only mother samples were available in six and three families, respectively, and pCNVs were inherited from each of their mothers in those families other than a family of the proband with deletion of SHROOM4. This study should help to identify the novel XLMR genes and mechanisms leading to MR and reveal the clinical conditions and genomic background of XLMR.
...
PMID:Copy-number variations on the X chromosome in Japanese patients with mental retardation detected by array-based comparative genomic hybridization analysis. 2061 65