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)

Canavan disease is characterised as a rare, neurodegenerative disease that usually causes death in early childhood. It is an autosomal recessive disorder due to an aspartoacylase (ASPA) deficiency. The causative gene has been mapped to chromosome 17 pter-p13. Here we describe three affected children from two Greek families with an unusually mild course of Canavan disease. All children presented with muscular hypotonia and macrocephaly. Diagnosis was based on elevated N-acetylaspartate in urine, reduced aspartoacylase activity in fibroblasts, and marked white matter changes on cerebral imaging. All three affected individuals exhibited continuous psychomotor development without any regression. Genetic analyses revealed compound heterozygous mutations (Y288 C; F295 S) in two individuals. The Y288 C variant was previously described in a child with macrocephaly, mild developmental delay, increased signal intensity in the basal ganglia, partial cortical blindness and retinitis pigmentosa, and slightly elevated N-acetylaspartate in the urine. Demonstration of the same variant in two unusually mildly affected Canavan disease patients and absence of this variant in 154 control chromosomes suggest a possible pathogenic role in mild Canavan disease. In the third individual, two homozygous sequence variants were identified, which comprise the known G274R mutation and a novel K213E variant.
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PMID:Possible genotype-phenotype correlations in children with mild clinical course of Canavan disease. 1613 49

Wiedemann-Rautenstrauch syndrome is a rare disorder with a progressive course and early lethality. Severe mental and growth retardation, muscle hypotonia, a progeroid face, wrinkled skin, relative macrocephaly with late closure of the anterior fontanel, arachnodactyly and congenital heart defects are also typical. We report on a female infant with all the characteristic features of this syndrome after birth. Chromosomal studies on peripheral leukocytes showed a normal karyotype. In view of an abnormal lipid distribution and lipodystrophy, metabolic studies for congenital disorders of glycosylation have been performed with normal results. At the age of 2 years 6 months the progeroid signs were no longer present, and the patient had a striking improvement in her psychomotor development. As there are overlapping features in Wiedemann-Rautenstrauch syndrome and in mosaic polyploidy, including psychomotor retardation, reduced peripheral muscle bulk, arachnodactyly and lipodystrophy, chromosome analysis was performed in the fibroblast culture of our patient. A mosaic triploidy/tetraploidy was detected in 60% and 14% of the cells, respectively. We therefore recommend chromosome analysis of fibroblasts from patients with a neonatal presentation of progeroid features and lipodystrophy.
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PMID:Transient progeroid phenotype and lipodystrophy in mosaic polyploidy. 1631 4

We describe two sisters with a mild-onset variant of Canavan's disease who presented at age 50 and 19 months with developmental delay but without macrocephaly, hypotonia, spasticity, or seizures. Remarkably, both patients had age-appropriate head control, gross motor development, and muscle tone. There were very mild deficits in fine motor skills, coordination, and gait. Both sisters had a history of strabismus, but otherwise vision was normal. The older child showed evidence of mild cognitive and social impairment, whereas language and behavior were normal for age in the infant. Both patients were found to be compound heterozygotes for C914A (A305E) and G212A (R71H) mutations in ASPA. Like all other known ASPA mutations, this previously unknown G212A mutation appears to have low absolute enzyme activity. Nevertheless, it is associated in these patients with an extremely benign phenotype that is highly atypical of Canavan's disease. Biochemical and clinical data were evaluated using a generalized linear mixed model generated from 25 other subjects with Canavan's disease. There were statistically significant differences in brain chemistry and clinical evaluations, supporting a distinct variant of Canavan's disease. Future studies of ASPA enzyme structure and gene regulation in these subjects could lead to a better understanding of Canavan's pathophysiology and improvements in ASPA gene therapy.
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PMID:Mild-onset presentation of Canavan's disease associated with novel G212A point mutation in aspartoacylase gene. 1643 72

Initially described as a rare MCA/MR syndrome occurring only in boys, due to a recessive mutation on the X chromosome [Opitz and Kaveggia, 1974], the FG syndrome (FGS) now emerges as a more common disorder also occurring in girls. Based on over 50 reported cases, FGS is associated with developmental delay (especially speech), hypotonia, postnatal onset relative macrocephaly, prominent forehead, frontal hair upsweep, telecanthus, or ocular hypertelorism, thin vermilion border of the upper lip, relatively short fingers with broad thumbs and halluces, persistent fetal fingertip pads, anal anomalies, and/or constipation. Major malformations are rare, and include pyloric stenosis, anal agenesis, cryptorchidism, hypospadias, and congenital heart defects. Abnormal EEGs and seizures have been reported in almost 70% of patients. Brain MRI shows corpus callosum abnormalities associated with dilatation of lateral ventricles and, less frequently, periventricular nodular heterotopias, mild cerebellar defects, and reduced periventricular white matter. Chiari 1 malformation seems to be frequent. The behavior phenotype appears to be characterized by ADHD, and relatively less developed language, fine motor and executive function skills; whereas visual-spatial abilities seem to be a relative strength. Five candidate loci are already known but no gene identified. We describe 25 patients referred to the Stella Maris Institute for evaluation of DD/MR, and diagnosed as FGS. They were between 2 and 15 1/2 years at the first observation. High resolution banding, FRAXA/FRAXE DNA analysis, and subtelomere FISH analysis were performed in all of them, and all had normal results. Thirteen patients were followed-up from 6 months to 9 years. Our report focuses on physical, neurological, developmental findings, and natural history of FGS. Experience with our series of patients suggests that the syndrome may be common, and should be routinely considered in the evaluation of children and adolescents with DD/MR.
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PMID:The FG syndrome: report of a large Italian series. 1669

Canavan disease (CD) is an autosomal recessive disorder, characterized by spongy degeneration of the brain. Patients with CD have aspartoacylase (ASPA) deficiency, which results accumulation of N-acetylaspartic acid (NAA) in the brain and elevated excretion of urinary NAA. Clinically, patients with CD have macrocephaly, mental retardation and hypotonia. A knockout mouse for CD which was engineered, also has ASPA deficiency and elevated NAA. Molecular studies of the mouse brain showed abnormal expression of multiple genes in addition to ASPA deficiency. Adenoassociated virus mediated gene transfer and stem cell therapy in the knockout mouse are the latest attempts to alter pathophysiology in the CD mouse.
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PMID:Canavan disease: studies on the knockout mouse. 1680 6

We report a new case of megalencephaly and polymicrogyria with post-axial polydactyly and hydrocephalus (MPPH syndrome) in an 18-month-old girl. She was the first child of healthy non-consanguineous parents and measurements at birth were +3 standard deviations (S.D.) for weight, +2 S.D. for length and +4 S.D. for OFC. Ultrasound scan at 24 weeks of gestation (WG) showed mild ventriculomagaly with unique umbilical artery and dacryocystocele. Clinical examination at birth revealed macrosomia with macrocephaly, facial dysmorphism, post-axial polydactyly at the right hand and both feet, and axial hypotonia with hypertonic arms and legs. At 18 months of age, weight was +2 S.D., length was +2 S.D. and OFC was +4 S.D. She remained hypertonic, could not sit and had no hand use. Cerebral magnetic resonance imaging showed stable ventriculomegaly and polymicrogyria located on the frontal and perisylvian region with white matter hypersignal on T2-weighted images. There was no associated visceral malformation. Standard and high-resolution cytogenetic examination, telomeric FISH and array-CGH studies were normal. This case represents the sixth observation of MPPH syndrome as described by Mirzaa et al. in 2004. We provide further neurological follow-up since three out of five index patients were aged 6 months or less. We postulate that macrosomia at birth might be a major feature (five/six cases), with advanced bone age in the two/two investigated cases. White matter abnormalities might be an occasional feature of this syndrome (three/six cases), as well as dacryocystocele, if not coincidental (one/six case). The mode of inheritance of this syndrome remains unknown since there was no significant family history in all reported cases. The search for infracytogenetic chromosomal imbalance was unsuccessful.
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PMID:A new case of megalencephaly and perisylvian polymicrogyria with post-axial polydactyly and hydrocephalus: MPPH syndrome. 1680 58

Alexander disease is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by macrocephaly and progressive demyelination with frontal lobe preponderance. The infantile form, the most frequent variant, appears between birth and 2 years of age and involves a severe course with a rapid neurologic deterioration. Although magnetic resonance imaging is useful for diagnosis, currently diagnosis is confirmed by the finding of missense mutation in the glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) gene. This case reports a female who presented at the age of 5 months with refractory epilepsy and hypotonia. Laboratory examinations, muscle biopsy examination, and energetic metabolic study in muscle indicated increased concentrations of lactate, mitochondria with structural abnormalities, and decreased cytochrome-c oxidase activity respectively. Later, both clinical course and magnetic resonance findings were compatible with Alexander disease, which was confirmed by the finding of a novel glial fibrillary acidic protein gene mutation.
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PMID:Early mitochondrial dysfunction in an infant with Alexander disease. 1699 8

Glutaric acidemia type I (GA I) (GA I, McKusick 23167; OMIM # 231670) is an autosomal recessive metabolic disorder caused by glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase deficiency (EC 1.3.99.7). Clinically, the disease is characterized by macrocephaly, hypotonia, dystonia and diskinesia. Since the pathophysiology of this disorder is not yet well established, in the present investigation we determined a number of energy metabolism parameters, namely (14)CO(2) production, the activities of the respiratory chain complexes I-IV and of creatine kinase, in tissues of rats chronically exposed to glutaric acid (GA). High tissue GA concentrations (0.6 mM in the brain, 4 mM in skeletal muscle and 6 mM in plasma) were induced by three daily subcutaneous injections of saline-buffered GA (5 micromol x g(-1) body weight) to Wistar rats from the 5th to the 21st day of life. The parameters were assessed 12 h after the last GA injection in cerebral cortex and middle brain, as well as in skeletal muscle homogenates of GA-treated rats. GA administration significantly inhibited the activities of the respiratory chain complexes I-III and II and induced a significant increase of complex IV activity in skeletal muscle of rats. Furthermore, creatine kinase activity was also inhibited by GA treatment in skeletal muscle. In contrast, these measurements were not altered by GA administration in the brain structures studied. Taken together, it was demonstrated that chronic GA administration induced an impairment of energy metabolism in rat skeletal muscle probably due to a higher tissue concentration of this organic acid that may be possibly associated to the muscle weakness occurring in glutaric acidemic patients.
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PMID:Energy metabolism is compromised in skeletal muscle of rats chronically-treated with glutaric acid. 1722 3

Opitz-Kaveggia syndrome (also known as FG syndrome) is an X-linked disorder characterized by mental retardation, relative macrocephaly, hypotonia and constipation. We report here that the original family for whom the condition is named and five other families have a recurrent mutation (2881C>T, leading to R961W) in MED12 (also called TRAP230 or HOPA), a gene located at Xq13 that functions as a thyroid receptor-associated protein in the Mediator complex.
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PMID:A recurrent mutation in MED12 leading to R961W causes Opitz-Kaveggia syndrome. 1733 63

This article attempts to describe a very unusual case of a boy aged 15, who has had intractable epileptic phenomena, mental retardation, megalocephaly, micrognathy, syndactyly, small tongue, hypoplastic genitalia, gynecomasty, obesity, and slight left body hemiatrophy. Neurologically the patient has had hypotonia of the lower limbs, cerebellar dysfunction including horizontal nystagmus, bilateral intention tremor, dysdiadokokinesia, gait ataxia. The clinical investigation revealed low plasma cholesterol and hypoplasia of the vermis in MRI. The epileptic phenomena were intractable and polymorphous. One should have thought that this is an unusual case of Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome associated with features of Joubert syndrome.
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PMID:Clinical case: vermis hypoplasia with features of Smith-Lemli-Opitz syndrome. 1736 27


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