Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (hypotonia)
5,860 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Partial trisomy (interchromosomal duplication) of the short arm of chromosome No. 12 was observed in an infant girl with psychomotor retardation, prominent forehead, ptosis of the right eyelid, esotropia/exotropia, flat nose, hypotonia and other anomalies. A comparison of her features with those in five reported cases with a similar chromosomal imbalance shows certain features common to all, but the material is too limited for definitive characterization of a trisomy 12p syndrome.
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PMID:Partial trisomy 12p due to t(12;21)pat translocation. 85 22

Forty-six patients with Prader-Willi syndrome were examined to determine the incidence and character of ocular abnormalities. All patients met clinical criteria for this syndrome including infantile hypotonia, hypogonadism, truncal obesity, intellectual impairment, dysmorphic facies, and short stature. Thirty-two patients had best corrected visual acuities between 6/6 and 6/9 in each eye. Seven patients (15%) had myopia greater than -3.75 diopters. Nineteen (41%) patients had astigmatism of 1.25 diopters or greater. Amblyopia of strabismic, anisometropic, or ametropic etiology was present in 11 (24%) of the patients. Strabismus was present in 25 (54%) patients: 22 (48%) patients had esotropia and three (7%) had exotropia. Nine patients either received or required strabismus surgery. Thirty-three percent of the patients examined for iris transillumination defects had this finding. This study represents the first large series of patients with Prader-Willi syndrome to undergo detailed ophthalmologic evaluation. Recognition of this syndrome is important because of the high incidence of potentially treatable ocular problems.
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PMID:Ophthalmologic features of Prader-Willi syndrome. 339 59

Four sibs, 2 males and 2 females, were found to have the Cohen syndrome. All had moderate mental retardation, microcephaly, hypotonia, and narrow hands and feet with elongated fingers and toes; 3 were short of stature (2.0-3.5 SD below the mean) with weight between 10th and 50th centile and truncal obesity. Most of the facial characteristics of the syndrome were present: exotropia, prominent ears, short philtrum, and high nasal bridge. Each manifestation varied in severity from one sib to the other. The younger girl also had rheumatoid arthritis. Mild delay of puberty was described in 3 of the sibs. However, one of them has delivered a male infant with normal appearance whose psychomotor development has been normal (as of 9 months). No endocrine problems were documented in the sibship. All patients had normal chromosomes. The data on this sibship support the hypothesis of autosomal recessive inheritance of the Cohen syndrome. Microcephaly and short stature should be stressed as frequent manifestations of the syndrome. The variable expressivity, even among sibs, may be responsible for the paucity of reports on the mildest forms of the Cohen syndrome.
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PMID:Cohen syndrome: further delineation and inheritance. 724 18

Defects in the assembly of dolichol-linked oligosaccharide or its transfer to proteins result in severe, multi-system human diseases called Type I congenital disorders of glycosylation. We have identified a novel CDG type, CDG-Ij, resulting from deficiency in UDP-GlcNAc: dolichol phosphate N-acetyl-glucosamine-1 phosphate transferase (GPT) activity encoded by DPAGT1. The patient presents with severe hypotonia, medically intractable seizures, mental retardation, microcephaly, and exotropia. Metabolic labeling of cultured dermal fibroblasts from the patient with [2-(3)H]-mannose revealed lowered incorporation of radiolabel into full-length dolichol-linked oligosaccharides and glycoproteins. In vitro enzymatic analysis of microsomal fractions from the cultured cells indicated that oligosaccharyltransferase activity is normal, but the GPT activity is reduced to approximately 10% of normal levels while parents have heterozygous levels. The patient's paternal DPAGT1 allele contains a point mutation (660A>G) that replaces a highly conserved tyrosine with a cysteine (Y170C). The paternal allele cDNA produces a full-length protein with almost no activity when over-expressed in CHO cells. The maternal allele makes only about 12% normal mature mRNA, while the remainder shows a complex exon skipping pattern that shifts the reading frame encoding a truncated non-functional GPT protein. Thus, we conclude that the DPAGT1 gene defects are responsible for the CDG symptoms in this patient. Hum Mutat 22:144-150, 2003.
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PMID:Deficiency of UDP-GlcNAc:Dolichol Phosphate N-Acetylglucosamine-1 Phosphate Transferase (DPAGT1) causes a novel congenital disorder of Glycosylation Type Ij. 1287 55

A 10-year-old African-American male has been followed since 2 years of age due to his mental retardation, severe behavioral problems, and dysmorphism. Conventional cytogenetic analysis, chromosome painting, high-resolution comparative genomic hybridization (HR-CGH), and bacterial artificial chromosome fluorescent in situ hybridization (BAC FISH) revealed an apparent duplication in the short arm of a chromosome 11, dup(11)(p14.3p15.1), seen also in his mentally retarded mother. The proband had moderate to severe mental retardation, a history of IUGR, infantile hypotonia, FTT, exotropia, inguinal hernia repair, and several dysmorphic features. His mother had mild mental retardation, a history of impulsivity, assaultive outbursts, and similar dysmorphism. Although G-banding and FISH indicated a duplication, HR-CGH confined the localization of material to bands 11p14-11p15 and aided the selection of locus-specific BAC clones to more precisely characterize the duplicated region. To our knowledge, the results represent the first example of a familial, cytogenetically visible duplication of euchromatin in 11p that excludes the Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome critical region. It is possible that one or more genes had been disrupted at the breakpoints of the above structural chromosomal rearrangement giving rise to the present phenotype.
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PMID:Duplication of 11p14.3-p15.1 in a mentally retarded proband and his mother detected by G-banding and confirmed by high-resolution CGH and BAC FISH. 1651 86

Mosaic variegated aneuploidy (MVA) is a rare condition characterized by multiple trisomies, rarely monosomies, and a non-specific phenotype including microcephaly, growth and mental retardation, mild malformations, and an increased risk of malignancy. We describe a patient with MVA in whom trisomy 19 mosaicism was originally suspected. The patient was the product of an uncomplicated term pregnancy and delivery. Significant findings were mental retardation, obesity, mild epicanthal folds, tapering fingers, relatively small hands and feet, alternating exotropia, nasal speech limited to short phrases, and generalized hypotonia. There is no family history for birth defects, mental retardation, or consanguinity. The initial peripheral blood chromosome study showed trisomy 19 in 4 of 31 metaphase cells. Because mosaic trisomy 19 is rare, the study was extended to 100 cells, wherein two cells with trisomy 8 were identified. A second blood karyotype was obtained and found to be 47,XX,+8[3]/47,XX,+19[3]/47,XX, +18[2]/47,XX,+9[1]/46,XX[91]. Skin fibroblast chromosome studies revealed a 46,XX karyotype in 120 cells examined. There was no evidence of premature centromere separation. Mutations in the BUB1B gene that encodes a key mitotic spindle checkpoint protein have been described in MVA; however, no mutations of this gene were identified in our patient. This case illustrates the importance of considering other possibilities when confronted with an extremely rare diagnosis such as mosaic trisomy 19. In addition, it shows the importance of not simply interpreting a low percentage of multiple aneuploidies as cell culture artifact, because an additional work-up to rule out MVA may be warranted since this diagnosis is associated with an increased risk of malignancy.
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PMID:Mosaic variegated aneuploidy without microcephaly: implications for cytogenetic diagnosis. 1763 82

A 10-month-old boy was seen for the first time for a health supervision visit by a pediatrician. A brief review of the child's medical history did not reveal any specific problems. On physical examination, the pediatrician found an alert, smiling child, but she was surprised by the following observations: unable to sit without support, absent pincer grasp, no audible language, unilateral exotropia, and microcephaly. Expansion of the medical history revealed an uneventful full-term prenatal course and normal vaginal delivery. The mother denied use of alcohol or other drugs/medications during the pregnancy. She did not have a recent history of any infections, unexplained fevers, or high risks for sexually transmitted disease. The baby cried spontaneously and the parents reported no resuscitation efforts. There were early feeding problems associated with a poor suck and gastroesophageal reflux. The parents were healthy and this was their first child. Family history was negative for early problems in child development or any neurological conditions. Parents were high school graduates without any learning problems; they were both employed in retail sales with a steady employment history. The pediatrician then took a second look at the child and discovered truncal hypotonia, extremity hypertonia, tongue protrusion, and a broad mouth. She concluded that the child had a global developmental delay, including delays in motor, language, and social development.
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PMID:Global developmental delay in a 10-month-old infant boy. 2041 75

Abnormalities of deep cerebellar nuclei in Joubert syndrome have been previously reported only in rare autopsy cases. Epilepsy in association with Joubert syndrome is also rarely reported. In two new cases of patients with Joubert syndrome, bilateral hypoplasia of deep cerebellar nuclei was detected in vivo by magnetic resonance imaging. One of the patients had drug-resistant epilepsy. Both patients received clinical examination, electroencephalography, neuropsychologic testing, and high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging (1.5 T). Patient 1, a 7-year-old boy, had muscular hypotonia, periodic tachypnea, mild ataxia, global developmental delay, exotropia, and polydactyly. Patient 2, a 23-year-old woman, had muscular hypotonia, epilepsy with pharmacoresistant generalized tonic-clonic seizures, learning disability, esotropia, and mild gait ataxia. Abnormalities of deep cerebellar nuclei might contribute to the pathophysiology of epilepsy in patients with Joubert syndrome.
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PMID:Hypoplasia of deep cerebellar nuclei in joubert syndrome. 1943 86

Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) are caused by enzymatic defects of the formation or processing of lipid-linked oligosaccharides and glycoproteins. Since the majority of proteins is glycosylated, a defect in a singular CDG enzyme leads to a multisytemic disease with secondary malfunction of thousands of proteins. CDG-Ij (DPAGT1-CDG) is caused by a defect of the human DPAGT1 (UDP-GlcNAc: Dolichol Phosphate N-Acetylglucosamine-1-Phosphotransferase), catalyzing the first step of N-linked glycosylation. So far the clinical phenotype of only one CDG-Ij patient has been described. The patient showed severe muscular hypotonia, intractable seizures, developmental delay, mental retardation, microcephaly and exotropia. Molecular studies of this patient revealed the heterozygous mutation c.660A>G (Y170C; paternal) in combination with an uncharacterized splicing defect (maternal). Two further mutations, c.890A>T (I297F) and c.162-8G>A as a splicing defect were detected when analyzing DPAGT1 in two affected siblings of a second family. We report two new patients with the novel homozygous mutation, c.341C>G (A114 G), causing a severe clinical phenotype, characterized by hyperexcitability, intractable seizures, bilateral cataracts, progressive microcephaly and muscular hypotonia. Both our patients died within their first year of life. With the discovery of this novel mutation and a detailed clinical description we extend the clinical features of CDG-Ij in order to improve early detection of this disease.
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PMID:Congenital disorder of glycosylation type Ij (CDG-Ij, DPAGT1-CDG): extending the clinical and molecular spectrum of a rare disease. 2230 30

We present a rare case of mosaicism for a structural abnormality of chromosome 12 in a patient with phenotypic features of Pallister-Killian syndrome. A six-month-old child with dysmorphic features, exotropia, hypotonia, and developmental delay was mosaic for both a normal karyotype and a cell line with 12p duplication/triplication in 25 percent of metaphase cells. Utilization of fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) identified three copies of probes from the end of the short arm of chromosome 12 (TEL(12p13) locus and the subtelomere (12p terminal)) on the structurally abnormal chromosome 12. Genome-wide SNP array analysis revealed that the regions of duplication and triplication were of maternal origin. The abnormal cell line in our patient was present at 25 percent at six months and 19 months of age in both metaphase and interphase cells from peripheral blood, where typically the isochromosome 12p is absent in the newborn. This may suggest that the gene(s) resulting in a growth disadvantage of abnormal cells in peripheral blood of patients with tetrasomy 12p may not have the same influence when present in only three copies.
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PMID:Persistent mosaicism for 12p duplication/triplication chromosome structural abnormality in peripheral blood. 2415 66


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