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)

A locus for X-linked hydrocephalus (HSAS), which is characterized by mental retardation and enlarged brain ventricles, maps to the same subchromosomal region (Xq28) as the gene for neural cell adhesion molecule L1. We have found novel L1 mRNA species in cells from affected members of a HSAS family containing deletions and insertions produced by the utilization of alternative 3' splice sites. A point mutation at a potential branch point signal in an intron segregates with the disease and is likely to be responsible for the abnormal RNA processing. These results suggest that HSAS is a disorder of neuronal cell migration due to disruption of L1 protein function.
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PMID:Aberrant splicing of neural cell adhesion molecule L1 mRNA in a family with X-linked hydrocephalus. 130 58

X-linked hydrocephalus (HSAS) is the most frequent genetic form of hydrocephalus. Clinical symptoms of HSAS include hydrocephalus, mental retardation, clasped thumbs, and spastic paraparesis. Recently we have assigned the HSAS gene to Xq28 by linkage analysis. In the present study we used a panel of 18 Xq27-q28 marker loci to further localize the HSAS gene in 13 HSAS families of different ethnic origins. Among the Xq27-q28 marker loci used, DXS52, DXS15, and F8C gave the highest combined lod scores, of 14.64, 6.53 and 6.33, respectively, at recombination fractions of .04, 0, and .05, respectively. Multipoint linkage analysis localizes the HSAS gene in the telomeric part of the Xq28 region, with a maximal lod score of 20.91 at 0.5 cM distal to DXS52. Several recombinations between the HSAS gene and the Xq28 markers DXS455, DXS304, DXS305, and DXS52 confirm that the HSAS locus is distal to DXS52. One crossover between HSAS and F8C suggests that HSAS gene to be proximal to F8C. Therefore, data from multipoint linkage analysis and the localization of key crossovers indicate that the HSAS gene is most likely located between DXS52 and F8C. This high-resolution genetic mapping places the HSAS locus within a region of less than 2 Mb in length, which is now amenable to positional cloning.
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PMID:Further localization of X-linked hydrocephalus in the chromosomal region Xq28. 164 32

X-linked recessive hydrocephalus (HSAS) occurs at a frequency of approximately 1 per 30,000 male births and consists of hydrocephalus, stenosis of the aqueduct of Sylvius, mental retardation, spastic paraparesis, and clasped thumbs. Prenatal diagnosis of affected males by ultrasonographic detection of hydrocephalus is unreliable because hydrocephalus may be absent antenatally. Furthermore, carrier detection in females is not possible because they are asymptomatic. Using four families segregating HSAS, we performed linkage analysis with a panel of X-linked probes that detect restriction fragment length polymorphisms. We report here that HSAS, in all tested families, is closely linked to marker loci mapping in Xq28 (DXS52, lod = 6.52 at theta of 0.03; F8, lod = 4.32 at theta of 0.00; DXS15, lod = 3.40 at theta of 0.00). These data assign HSAS to the gene-dense chromosomal band Xq28 and allow for both prenatal diagnosis and carrier detection by linkage analysis.
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PMID:Assignment of X-linked hydrocephalus to Xq28 by linkage analysis. 197 56

X-linked hydrocephalus (HSAS) (MIM *307000), MASA syndrome (MIM *303350), and complicated spastic paraplegia (SPG1) (MIM *312900) are closely related. Soon after delineation, SPG1 was incorporated into the spectrum of MASA syndrome. HSAS and MASA syndrome show great clinical overlap; DNA linkage analysis places the loci at Xq28. In an increasing number of families with MASA syndrome or HSAS, mutations in L1CAM, a gene located at Xq28, have been reported. In order to further delineate the clinical spectrum, we studied 6 families with male patients presenting with MASA syndrome, HSAS, or a mixed phenotype. We summarized data from previous reports and compared them with our data. Clinical variability appears to be great, even within families. Problems in genetic counseling and prenatal diagnosis, the possible overlap with X-linked corpus callosum agenesis and FG syndrome, and the different forms of X-linked complicated spastic paraplegia are discussed. Since adducted thumbs and spastic paraplegia are found in 90% of the patients, the condition may be present in males with nonspecific mental retardation. We propose to abandon the designation MASA syndrome and use the term HSAS/MASA spectrum, incorporating SPG1.
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PMID:Spectrum of X-linked hydrocephalus (HSAS), MASA syndrome, and complicated spastic paraplegia (SPG1): Clinical review with six additional families. 764 88

The neural cell-adhesion molecule L1 is involved in intercellular recognition and neuronal migration in the CNS. Recently, we have shown that mutations in the gene encoding L1 are responsible for three related disorders; X-linked hydrocephalus, MASA (mental retardation, aphasia, shuffling gait, and adducted thumbs) syndrome, and spastic paraplegia type I (SPG1). These three disorders represent a clinical spectrum that varies not only between families but sometimes also within families. To date, 14 independent L1 mutations have been reported and shown to be disease causing. Here we report nine novel L1 mutations in X-linked hydrocephalus and MASA-syndrome families, including the first examples of mutations affecting the fibronectin type III domains of the molecule. They are discussed in relation both to phenotypes and to the insights that they provide into L1 function.
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PMID:New domains of neural cell-adhesion molecule L1 implicated in X-linked hydrocephalus and MASA syndrome. 776 52

Recently, studies in the usually disparate fields of human genetics and developmental neurobiology have converged to reveal that some types of human mental retardation and brain malformations are due to mutations that affect the neural cell adhesion molecule L1. L1 has a very complex biology, interacting with a variety of ligands, and functioning in migration of neurons and growth of axons. Over the past few years, it has also become clear that L1 is able to influence intracellular second messengers. The identification of a number of different mutations in L1, some of which alter the extracellular portion of the molecule, and others that change only the cytoplasmic tail, confirm that L1 is a crucial player in normal brain development. The information gained from genetic analysis of human L1 is giving new insights into how L1 functions in the formation of major axon pathways, but it also raises unanticipated questions about how L1 participates in the development of cortical and ventricular systems.
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PMID:Mutations in the cell adhesion molecule L1 cause mental retardation. 777 87

MASA syndrome is a recessive X-linked disorder characterized by mental retardation, adducted thumbs, shuffling gait, aphasia and, in some cases, hydrocephalus. Since it has been shown that X-linked hydrocephalus can be caused by mutations in L1CAM, a neuronal cell adhesion molecule, we performed an L1CAM mutation analysis in eight unrelated patients with MASA syndrome. Three different L1CAM mutations were identified: a deletion removing part of the open reading frame and two point mutations resulting in amino acid substitutions. L1CAM, therefore, harbours mutations leading to either MASA syndrome or HSAS, and might be frequently implicated in X-linked mental retardation with or without hydrocephalus.
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PMID:MASA syndrome is due to mutations in the neural cell adhesion gene L1CAM. 792 Jun 60

L1 is a neuronal cell adhesion molecule with important functions in the development of the nervous system. The gene encoding L1 is located near the telomere of the long arm of the X chromosome in Xq28. We review here the evidence that several X-linked mental retardation syndromes including X-linked hydrocephalus (HSAS), MASA syndrome, X-linked complicated spastic paraparesis (SP1) and X-linked corpus callosum agenesis (ACC) are all due to mutations in the L1 gene. The inter- and intrafamilial variability in families with an L1 mutation is very wide, and patients with HSAS, MASA, SP1 and ACC can be present within the same family. Therefore, we propose here to refer to this clinical syndrome with the acronym CRASH, for Corpus callosum hypoplasia, Retardation, Adducted thumbs, Spastic paraplegia and Hydrocephalus.
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PMID:CRASH syndrome: clinical spectrum of corpus callosum hypoplasia, retardation, adducted thumbs, spastic paraparesis and hydrocephalus due to mutations in one single gene, L1. 855 2

X-linked hereditary spastic paraplegias (HSP) present with two distinct phenotypes, pure and complicated. The pure form is characterized by spasticity and gait difficulties but lacks the additional features (nystagmus, dysarthria, mental retardation) present in the complicated form. The complicated form is heterogeneous, caused by mutations of the L1CAM gene at Xq28 (SPG1) or the PLP gene at Xq22 (SPG2) that is allelic to Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (PMD). Since in one kindred (K313) the pure form of HSP was also mapped to Xq22, this raises the issue as to whether a pure form of HSP exists that is allelic to X-linked complicated HSP (SPG2) and PMD. To answer this question, we carried out linkage analysis in a new pedigree with pure HSP (K101) and refined linkage in pedigree K313. The PLP gene was also screened for mutation by direct sequencing and reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). In both families, the disease locus mapped to Xq22 with Lod scores at zero recombination of 5.3 for COL4A5 2B6 in K313 and 2.4 for DXS101 in K101. A T to C transition in exon 5 of the PLP gene was identified from affected individuals of K313. This transition causes a Ser to Pro mutation in the major extracellular loop of PLP/DM20. This finding demonstrates that a form of X-linked pure spastic paraplegia, X-linked complicated HSP (SPG2) and PMD are allelic disorders. There was no evidence of mutations in either coding sequences or the intron/exon junctions of PLP in pedigree K101, suggesting that the disease-producing mutation may be in the noncoding portions of PLP or in a nearby gene.
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PMID:Refined genetic mapping and proteolipid protein mutation analysis in X-linked pure hereditary spastic paraplegia. 878 Jan 1

Familial spastic paraplegia (FSP or SPG) is a genetically heterogeneous group of upper motor neuron syndromes. To date, two distinct loci for X-linked recessive type (SPG1 and SPG2), three loci for autosomal dominant type (FSP1, FSP2 and FSP3), and one locus for autosomal recessive type have been reported. SPG1 and SPG2 have been mapped to Xq28 and Xq21-q22, respectively. SPG1 shows a mutation in the gene for neural cell adhesion molecule L1 (LICAM), which is an axonal glycoprotein involved in neuronal migration and differentiation. Different mutations of the same L1 gene also cause. MASA (mental retardation, aphasia, spastic paraplegia, adducted thumbs) syndrome and X-linked hydrocephalus. SPG2 shows mutations in one of the major myelin proteins, the proteolipid protein (PLP) gene, and is allelic to Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease. Thus, mutations in two functionally distinct genes manifest the phenotype of X-linked spastic paraparesis. Three dominantly inherited spastic paraplegia genes have been genetically mapped to regions of chromosomes, yet no specific genes or mutations have been identified. FSP1 is mapped to a region of 7 cM on chromosome 14q12-q23 (approximately 20% of dominant FSP families) and FSP2 to 4 cM on chromosome 2p21-p24 (approximately 70% of dominant FSP families). Anticipation (increasing clinical severity in successive generations) has been observed in both FSP1 and FSP2 families. Another autosomal dominant FSP (FSP3) has been mapped in the centromeric region of chromosome 15q (< 10% of dominant FSP families). An autosomal recessive FSP has been mapped to chromosome 8q. The definite genetic heterogeneity in FSP indicates that a multitude of genes/proteins can cause spastic paraplegia. Clinical features of each of the loci which may permit differential diagnosis are discussed. We also present pedigrees of two new FSP families.
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PMID:Molecular genetics of familial spastic paraplegia: a multitude of responsible genes. 878 67


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