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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CdLS) is a rare, multiple congenital anomaly/
mental retardation
syndrome characterized by varied clinical signs including facial dysmorphism, pre- and post-natal growth defects, small hands and malformations of the upper limbs. Established genetic causes include mutations in the NIPBL (50-60%), SMC1L1 and SMC3 (5%) genes. To detect chromosomal rearrangements pointing to novel positional candidate CdLS genes, we used array-
CGH
to analyze a subgroup of 24 CdLS patients negative for mutations in the NIPBL and SMC1L1 genes. We identified three carriers of DNA copy number alterations, including a de novo 15q26.2-qter 8-Mb deletion, and two inherited 13q14.2-q14.3 1-Mb deletion and 13q21.32-q21.33 1.5-Mb duplication, not reported among copy number variants. The clinical presentation of all three patients matched the diagnostic criteria for CdLS, and the phenotype of the patient with the 15qter deletion is compared to that of both CdLS and 15qter microdeletion patients.
...
PMID:Search for genomic imbalances in a cohort of 24 Cornelia de Lange patients negative for mutations in the NIPBL and SMC1L1 genes. 1879 46
Mental retardation
(MR) is not a common feature observed in patients with classical ectodermal dysplasias (EDs). Several genes responsible for EDs and MR have been identified. However, the causation has yet to be identified in a significant number of patients with either ED or MR. Here, we have molecularly characterized a de novo balanced translocation t(1;6)(p22.1;p22.1) in a female patient who had mild features of ED with hypodontia, microcephaly, and cognitive impairment. Mapping of the translocation breakpoints in the patient revealed no obvious causative gene for either ED or MR. Whole genome array
CGH
analysis unveiled two novel submicroscopic deletions at 2q12.2 and 6q22.3, unrelated to the translocation in the patient. The 2q12.2 deletion contains a known ED gene, ectodysplasin-A receptor (EDAR), and the loss of one copy of this gene is considered to be responsible for the ectodermal phenotype in the patient. It is plausible that a potential autosomal MR gene deleted at 2q12.2 or 6q22.3 is likely the cause of the neurodevelopmental defects in the patient.
...
PMID:Identification of ectodysplasin-A receptor gene deletion at 2q12.2 and a potential autosomal MR locus. 1885 57
We describe a 14-year-old boy with congenital bilateral cataracts, blepharophimosis, ptosis, choanal atresia, sensorineural hearing loss, short, webbed neck, poor esophageal motility, severe growth and
mental retardation
, skeletal anomalies, seizures, and no speech. As an infant, he had transient hypogammaglobulinemia requiring IVIG therapy. Cytogenetic studies show an apparently de novo visible duplication at 1p36.3. Fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) studies confirm that the common region for the 1p36 deletion syndrome (p58) is duplicated. Probes for D1Z2 at 1p36.3 and the subtelomeric region of 1p (TEL1p) are also duplicated. Array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) studies were done at three separate laboratories, each with somewhat different results. BAC whole genome array
CGH
suggests a single clone gain at the 1p terminus and a single clone deletion at 1p36.3. A targeted BAC array panel with higher resolution at the distal 1p36 region detects a telomeric duplication and an interstitial deletion. Oligonucleotide whole genomic aCGH shows the highest resolution and a more complex rearrangement: two duplications, an interstitial deletion, and a normal region. The MMP23A/B "matrix metalloproteinase 23A/B" genes are within the distal duplication region in our patient, and this patient does not have craniosynostosis. This is the first association of congenital cataracts, choanal atresia, and transient immune abnormalities with 1p36 duplication/deletion. This case illustrates the limitations of different cytogenetic technologies, and shows how three separate aCGH platforms allow for refined delineation and interpretation of the complex cytogenetic rearrangement which would not have been discovered by standard high-resolution chromosome analysis.
...
PMID:Cytogenetic and array CGH characterization of de novo 1p36 duplications and deletion in a patient with congenital cataracts, hearing loss, choanal atresia, and mental retardation. 1892 66
A ring X chromosome is found in about 6% of patients with Turner syndrome (TS), often with mosaicism for a 45,X cell line. Patients with this karyotype are reported to have a higher incidence of a more severe phenotype including
mental retardation
. In fact, some studies have shown a correlation between this severity and the presence or absence of an intact and functional X inactivation center (XIST). However, the phenotype of the individuals with r(X) cannot be entirely defined in terms of their X-inactivation patterns. Nevertheless, a small group of these patients have been described to manifest clinical features reminiscent of the Kabuki syndrome. Here we present a female patient with clinical features resembling Kabuki syndrome and a mos 45,X/46,X,r(X) karyotype. Methylation analyses of polymorphic alleles of the androgen receptor gene showed that both alleles were unmethylated suggesting an active ring chromosome. A specific X chromosome array
CGH
was performed estimating the size of the ring to be 17 Mb, lacking the XIST gene, and including some genes with possible implications in the phenotype of the patient.
...
PMID:A small and active ring X chromosome in a female with features of Kabuki syndrome. 1892 62
Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome (WHS) is a well-known multiple congenital anomalies/
mental retardation
syndrome, firstly described in 1961 by Cooper and Hirschhorn. Its frequency is estimated as 1/50,000-1/20,000 births, with a female predilection of 2:1. The disorder is caused by partial loss of material from the distal portion of the short arm of chromosome 4 (4p16.3), and is considered a contiguous gene syndrome. No single gene deletions or intragenic mutations have been shown to confer the full WHS phenotype. Since the disorder was brought to the attention of geneticists, many additional cases have been published. Only in 1999, however, were the first data on the natural history brought to the attention of the medical community. The purpose of the present study is to help delineate in more detail and over a longer period of time, the natural history of WHS, in order to establish appropriate health supervision and anticipatory guidance for individuals with this disorder. We have collected information on 87 patients diagnosed with WHS (54 females and 33 males) both in USA and Italy. Age at first observation ranged between newborn and 17 years. Twenty patients have been followed from 4 months to 23 years. The deletion proximal breakpoint varied from 4p15.32 to 4p16.3, and, by FISH, was terminal and included both WHSCR. Deletion was detected by standard cytogenetics in 44/87 (50.5%) patients, whereas FISH was necessary in the other 43 (49.5%). Array-
CGH
analysis at 1 Mb resolution was performed in 34/87 patients, and, in 15/34 (44%), showed an unbalanced translocation leading to both a 4p monosomy and a partial trisomy for another chromosome arm. Six more patients had been previously shown to have an unbalanced translocation by karyotype analysis or FISH with a WHS-specific probe. Sixty-five of 87 patients had an apparent pure, de novo, terminal deletion; and 1/87 a tandem duplication of 4p16.1p16.3 associated with 4p16.3pter deletion. Age at diagnosis varied between 7 months gestation and 16 years. Ninety-three percent had a seizure disorder with a good outcome; 80% had prenatal onset growth deficiency followed by short stature and slow weight gain; 60% had skeletal anomalies; 50% had heart lesions; 50% had abnormal tooth development; and 40% had hearing loss. Distinctive EEG findings were seen in 90%. Structural CNS anomalies were detected in 80%. Global developmental delay of varying degrees was present in all patients. Almost 50% was able to walk either alone or with support. Hypotonia was present in virtually all patients. A global improvement was observed in all individuals, over time. Our survey has also shown how the characteristic facial phenotype tends to be less pronounced in those patients with a smaller deletion, and microcephaly is not observed in the patients with certain cryptic unbalanced translocations.
...
PMID:Update on the clinical features and natural history of Wolf-Hirschhorn (4p-) syndrome: experience with 87 patients and recommendations for routine health supervision. 1893 24
Chromosomal imbalances, recognized as the major cause of
mental retardation
(MR), are often due to submicroscopic deletions or duplications not evidenced by conventional cytogenetic methods. Array-based comparative genomic hybridization (array-CGH) improves considerably the detection rate of submicroscopic chromosomal abnormalities and has proven to be an effective tool for detection of submicroscopic chromosome abnormalities in children with MR and/or multiple congenital defects. Observations of array-
CGH
deletions in defined chromosomal regions linked to a clinical phenotype will more and more allow to define genotype-phenotype correlations. We report here the case of a 10-year-old female with a de novo 7.8 Mb deletion in the 6q13-6q14.1 ascertained by array-
CGH
. The clinical features of this patient include psychomotor and language delay associated with minor dysmorphic features.
...
PMID:Characterization of an interstitial deletion 6q13-q14.1 in a female with mild mental retardation, language delay and minor dysmorphisms. 1899 76
13q deletion is characterized by a wide phenotypic spectrum resulting from a partial deletion of the long arm of chromosome 13. The main clinical features are
mental retardation
, growth retardation, craniofacial dysmorphy and various congenital defects. Only one recent Italian study was aimed at determining genotype-phenotype correlations among 13q deletions from a group of mainly live born children, using array-
CGH
and FISH. In order to improve the molecular characterization of 13q monosomy, 12 new patients (9 foetuses and 3 children) were collected based on a cohort of holoprosencephaly (HPE) linked to ZIC2 gene deletion and/or patients with 13q deletion diagnosed by standard karyotype. First, quantitative gene screening using MLPA (Multiplex Ligation dependent Probe Amplification) was performed to look for ZIC2 gene deletion and then,
CGH
array analysis was carried out using the Agilent Human Genome
CGH
microarray 4x44K (Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, USA). All the foetuses had severe cerebral midline malformations associated with a deletion including the ZIC2 gene. We report one patient with Steinfeld phenotype linked to this chromosomal anomaly, and suggest that some of the associations between cerebral midline malformation and limb defects might be related to 13q deletion. Further candidate genes are suspected to explain the malformations associated with cerebral anomalies in the hypothesis of a contiguous gene syndrome: SPRY2 in 13q31.1 is implicated in lens cell proliferation and differentiation for congenital cataract; GPC5 in 13q32 is mainly expressed in the mesenchyme of the developing limb bud for upper limb anomalies.
...
PMID:Twelve new patients with 13q deletion syndrome: genotype-phenotype analyses in progress. 1902 13
We report on a 28-year old woman carrying a 0.8 Mb de novo interstitial deletion in 19q13.32 detected by high-resolution array-
CGH
. She has severe mental retardation, tetralogy of Fallot, cleft lip and palate, deafness, megacolon and other dysmorphic features. Only a few cases of constitutional deletions located at the long arm of chromosome 19 have been previously described and this is the first report involving 19q13.32. The deleted region encompasses 15 genes, among which 3 candidate genes for genotype-phenotype correlation could be delineated. Since SLC8A2 is broadly expressed in brain and plays a potential role during embryonic development, its haploinsufficiency could possibly be related to
mental retardation
; as it is also expressed in aortic and intestinal smooth muscles, SLC8A2 could be related to the aortic defect of the complex cardiac malformation and to the megacolon. SAE1, a SUMO-1 activating enzyme subunit, may be related to cleft lip and palate. KPTN coding region may be a candidate gene for hearing loss. Further experimental studies on either in vivo models or diagnostic materials are needed to elucidate the role of these potential candidate genes for the phenotypic abnormalities observed in the investigated patient.
...
PMID:Array-CGH detection of a de novo 0.8Mb deletion in 19q13.32 associated with mental retardation, cardiac malformation, cleft lip and palate, hearing loss and multiple dysmorphic features. 1902 14
Microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization (array
CGH
) has revolutionized clinical cytogenetics, as it provides a relatively quick method to scan the genome for gains and losses of chromosomal material with significantly higher resolution and greater clinical yield than was previously possible. A number of different array
CGH
platforms have emerged and are being used successfully in the diagnostic setting. In the past few years, these new methodologies have led to the identification of novel genomic disorders in patients with developmental delay/
mental retardation
and/or multiple congenital anomalies (DD/MR/MCA) as well as the discovery that each individual carries inherited copy number variations (CNV) whose contributions to genetic variation and complex disease are not yet well understood. Although array
CGH
is currently being used as an adjunct test to standard karyotype analysis, it is likely to become the genetic test of choice, especially in cases of idiopathic MR/MCA.
...
PMID:Clinical utility of array CGH for the detection of chromosomal imbalances associated with mental retardation and multiple congenital anomalies. 1915 22
Deletions of chromosome bands 2p11.2 and 2p12 are rare, and only six patients have been reported to date. Here, we report on a 5-year-old girl with an 11.4 Mb interstitial deletion of chromosome bands 2p11.2-p12 and the characterization of this deletion by high-resolution array
CGH
. The patient presented with
mental retardation
, microcephaly and short stature. Facial features included broad nasal bridge, frontal bossing and mild dolichocephaly. Phenotypic comparison with previously published patients failed to reveal a consistent clinical pattern apart from developmental delay/
mental retardation
, which is probably due to different sizes and/or positions of the individual deletions. Among the 40 known genes deleted in our patient is REEP1, haploinsufficiency of which causes autosomal dominant spastic paraplegia type 31 (SPG31, OMIM 610250). Additional patients with well-characterized deletions within 2p11.2 and 2p12 will be needed to determine the role of individual genes for the clinical manifestations.
...
PMID:Interstitial deletion 2p11.2-p12: report of a patient with mental retardation and review of the literature. 1916 Nov 51
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