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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two unrelated patients with
Coffin-Lowry syndrome
are described. The main characteristics of a typical face, thick hands with tapering fingers and a transverse hypothenar crease, general
hypotonia
with extensible joints made diagnosis possible before the age of 6 months. A persistent large anterior fontanel beyond the age of two years may be another associated finding. Retarded bone age, coarsity of the face and skeletal malformations considered characteristic in adult patients were not present. Early recognition of
Coffin-Lowry syndrome
is important for genetic counseling and prevention of severe skeletal malformations.
...
PMID:Early clinical signs in Coffin-Lowry syndrome. 654 82
Linkage analysis was performed in three generations of a French family segregating a syndromal form of X-linked mental retardation. All affected males had neonatal
hypotonia
, seizures, muscular hypodevelopment, and severe mental deficiency. A peak lod score of 2.90 at a recombination fraction of theta = 0 was detected for DXS 1052 and DXS 451 (Xp22.13). Recombination between the disease locus and the polymorphic markers in DXS7163 and DXS1238 suggested a gene mapping to the Xp22.13-Xp21.2 region. Three candidate genes in this region were investigated: the cDNA for kinase Rsk-2 involved in
Coffin-Lowry syndrome
, the brain-specific exon of a transcript in the DMD locus (DP140 isoform of dystrophin), and exon 18 of the glycerol kinase gene, which is specific to fetal brain transcripts. All three sequences were normal.
...
PMID:Evidence for a new X-linked mental retardation gene in Xp21-Xp22: clinical and molecular data in one family. 1049
An unreported missense mutation of the ribosomal S6 kinase 2 (RSK2) gene has been identified in two male sibs with a mild form of
Coffin-Lowry syndrome (CLS)
inherited from their healthy mother. They exhibit transient severe
hypotonia
, macrocephaly, delay in closure of the fontanelles, normal gait, and mild mental retardation, associated in the first sib with transient autistic behaviour. Some dysmorphic features of
CLS
(in particular forearm fullness and tapering fingers) and many atypical findings (some of which were reminiscent of FG syndrome) were observed as well. The moderate phenotypic expression of this mutation extends the
CLS
phenotype to include less severe mental retardation and minor, hitherto unreported signs. The missense mutation identified may be less deleterious than those previously described. As this mutation occurs in a protein domain with no predicted function, it could be responsible for a conformational change affecting the protein catalytic function, since a non-polar amino acid is replaced by a charged residue.
...
PMID:Unreported RSK2 missense mutation in two male sibs with an unusually mild form of Coffin-Lowry syndrome. 1052 58
Coffin-Lowry syndrome (CLS)
is an X-linked disorder associated with mental retardation, distinctive facies and hands,
hypotonia
, and skeletal abnormalities. The syndrome results from mutations in the RSK2 gene located in Xp22.2. Although the syndrome has been elucidated clinically, few, if any, studies have focused on the cognitive deficits of the affected males or carrier females. The subjects of the present study were selected from two African-American families who have the same missense mutation (C340T) in RSK2. The subjects included six affected males, seven carrier females, three normal males and three non-carrier (normal) females. Normal family members served as contrast/comparison cohorts to control for socio-economic, sociocultural and genetic variables which would impinge on intellectual abilities. Analysis of cognitive function, as measured by the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale, 4th edn, demonstrated a distinct hierarchy of abilities from normal to carrier to affected patients. The mean composite IQs of the cohorts were 90.8, 65.0 and 43.2 for normal, carrier and affected individuals, respectively. These findings lend support to the clinical concept of negative intellectual effects in carriers of certain X-linked mental retardation conditions. X-inactivation studies showed that carrier females had mild to significant skewing. Normal females in the family did not demonstrate skewing. The correlation coefficient between IQ and X-inactivation status among carriers was not significant.
...
PMID:Cognitive function in Coffin-Lowry syndrome. 1203 Aug 96
Coffin-Lowry syndrome (CLS)
is a rare genetic disorder characterized by craniofacial abnormalities, mental retardation, short stature, and
hypotonia
. Patients with
CLS
may present with multiple musculoskeletal abnormalities. The purpose of this study was to identify and characterize the musculoskeletal findings in 10 patients with
CLS
. Eight patients presented with thoracolumbar kyphosis or kyphoscoliosis, with a mean Cobb angle of 45 degrees in the coronal plane and 31 degrees of thoracolumbar kyphosis. These may be progressive and difficult to treat, needing early surgical treatment. Close follow-up of the spinal deformities is strongly recommended to document progression. Sixty percent of the patients presented with bilateral flexible and painless planovalgus deformities. Hypoplasia of the ilium and hand deformities are common but do not seem to cause any functional problems. Observation is recommended for these asymptomatic hand, foot, and pelvic findings.
...
PMID:The musculoskeletal manifestations of the Coffin-Lowry syndrome. 1719 3
The
Coffin-Lowry syndrome (CLS)
is a rare but well-defined X-linked semidominant syndrome characterized by psychomotor and growth retardation, and progressive skeletal changes.
CLS
is caused by loss of function mutations in the Rps6ka3 gene encoding the ribosomal S6 kinase 2 (RSK2) protein. A distinctive paroxysmal disorder has been described in some
CLS
patients, characterized by episodes of sudden falling, without apparent alteration of consciousness, usually induced by unexpected tactile or auditory stimuli. Duration of episodes is very short, usually lasting a few seconds. The appellation "Stimulus-induced drop episodes" (SIDEs) was proposed for these non-epileptic events in
CLS
patients. SIDEs are clinically heterogeneous; with some patients exhibiting cataplexy-like events characterized by sudden
hypotonia
and collapse, and others hyperekplexia-like episodes with a startle response. The pathophysiology of SIDEs is not well understood.
...
PMID:Stimulus-induced drop episodes in Coffin-Lowry syndrome. 2249 Apr 25
Coffin-Lowry syndrome (CLS)
is an X-linked disorder characterized by growth and psychomotor retardation,
hypotonia
and progressive skeletal changes. RPS6KA3 is the only gene known to be associated with
CLS
, and over 150 distinct inactivating mutations in this gene have so far been reported in
CLS
patients. However, no defect is found in about half of the
CLS
compatible patients by exon sequencing. We report here the first deep intronic mutation in RPS6KA3, which is associated with the retention of intronic sequences in the mRNAs. Indeed, this finding suggests that all the patients with a highly suggestive
CLS
clinical diagnosis, but in whom exon screening has failed to detect a mutation, should be reanalyzed at the RNA level.
...
PMID:Identification of the first deep intronic mutation in the RPS6KA3 gene in a patient with a severe form of Coffin-Lowry syndrome. 2326 61
Coffin-Lowry syndrome
is a rare X-linked disorder characterized by craniofacial and skeletal abnormalities, mental retardation, short stature, and
hypotonia
. An 18-year-old man with morphologic features characteristic of
Coffin-Lowry syndrome
was referred to our institution for valve disease surgery for worsening cardiac failure. Echocardiography showed severe mitral valve regurgitation associated with tricuspid valve regurgitation. Mitral valve implantation with a biological valve and tricuspid annular plication with a ring was performed. The ascending aorta was hypoplastic. Both the mitral papillary muscle originating near the mitral annulus and the chordae were shortened. The patient's postoperative course was uneventful and his cardiac failure improved.
...
PMID:Mitral and tricuspid valve surgery for Coffin-Lowry syndrome. 2387 16
Coffin-Lowry syndrome (CLS)
is a rare X-linked dominant disorder characterized by intellectual disability, craniofacial abnormalities, short stature, tapering fingers,
hypotonia
, and skeletal malformations.
CLS
is caused by mutations in the Ribosomal Protein S6 Kinase, 90 kDa, Polypeptide 3 (RPS6KA3) gene located at Xp22.12, which encodes Ribosomal S6 Kinase 2 (RSK2). Here we analyzed RPS6KA3 in three unrelated
CLS
patients including one from the historical
Coffin-Lowry syndrome
family and found two novel mutations. To date, over 140 mutations in RPS6KA3 have been reported. However, the etiology of the very first familial case, which was described in 1971 by Lowry with detailed phenotype and coined the term
CLS
, has remained unknown. More than 40 years after the report, we succeeded in identifying deposited fibroblast cells from one patient of this historic family and found a novel heterozygous 216 bp in-frame deletion, encompassing exons 15 and 16 of RPS6KA3. Drop episodes in
CLS
patients were reported to be associated with truncating mutations deleting the C-terminal kinase domain (KD), and only one missense mutation and one single basepair duplication involving the C-terminal KD of RSK2 in the patients with drop episode have been reported thus far. Here we report the first in-frame deletion in C-terminal KD of RPS6KA3 in a
CLS
patient with drop episodes.
...
PMID:The historical Coffin-Lowry syndrome family revisited: identification of two novel mutations of RPS6KA3 in three male patients. 2504 51
Coffin-Lowry syndrome (CLS)
is a rare X-linked disorder characterized by moderate to severe intellectual disability,
hypotonia
, craniofacial features, tapering digits, short stature, and skeletal deformities. Using whole exome sequencing and high-resolution targeted comparative genomic hybridization array analysis, we identified a novel microduplication encompassing exons five through nine of RPS6KA3 in three full brothers. Each brother presented with intellectual disability and clinical and radiographic features consistent with
CLS
. qRT-PCR analyses performed on mRNA from the peripheral blood of the three siblings revealed a marked reduction of RPS6KA3 levels suggesting a loss-of-function mechanism. PCR analysis of the patients' cDNA detected a band greater than expected for an exon 4-10 amplicon, suggesting this was likely a direct duplication that lies between exons 4 through 10, which was later confirmed by Sanger sequencing. This microduplication is only the third intragenic duplication of RPS6KA3, and the second and smallest reported to date thought to cause
CLS
. Our study further supports the clinical utility of methods such as next-generation sequencing and high-resolution genomic arrays to detect small intragenic duplications. These methods, coupled with expression studies and cDNA structural analysis have the capacity to confirm the diagnosis of
CLS
in these rare cases.
...
PMID:An unusual cause for Coffin-Lowry syndrome: Three brothers with a novel microduplication in RPS6KA3. 3151 87
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