Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
PAX binding protein 1 (PAXBP1) is an adaptor protein linking the transcription factor PAX3 and PAX7 to the histone methylation machinery. PAXBP1 is a
nuclear protein
and its high expression is known in brain cerebellar hemisphere and cerebellum. Moreover, it is also found in abundance in muscle precursor cells that are involved in myogenesis and skeletal muscles formation. Whole genome SNP genotyping and exome sequencing in a family with distinct syndrome of global developmental delay and
hypotonia
mapped the disease locus to the chromosome 21q22.11 and identified a homozygous missense variant (c.1612C>T) in the PAXBP1 gene, respectively. This variant is predicted to change the highly conserved strongly basic arginine at position 538 in the PAX7 binding domain of PAXBP1 to a neutral cysteine (p.Arg538Cys) residue. Arg538 is highly conserved and the variant is predicted to be deleterious by variety of in silico tools. Furthermore, protein modeling studies showed that in the mutant protein (Cys538), the shorter cysteine is incapable of forming hydrogen bond with the side chain of nearby Asp517 due to its reduced size and lower polarizability. As a consequence, a slight local perturbation of the loop conformation in the PAX7 binding domain of the PAXBP1 protein was observed. Our findings suggest that the pathogenic variant in PAX binding protein underlies distinct syndrome of global developmental delay and myopathic
hypotonia
. This clinical report should prompt a search for mutations in PAXBP1 in patients presenting with developmental delay and
hypotonia
. Moreover, these results imply that establishment of PAXBP1 targets and its spatiotemporal interaction will help in understanding of development of cerebellar and will provide basis for developing therapeutic approaches.
...
PMID:A homozygous potentially pathogenic variant in the PAXBP1 gene in a large family with global developmental delay and myopathic hypotonia. 2854 22
POGZ (# 614787) encodes a multidomain
nuclear protein
involved in transcriptional regulation and its defective function has been recently associated with a syndromic neurodevelopmental disorder, known as White-Sutton syndrome (# 616364). While originally epileptic seizures were unreported, it seems that epilepsy represents a recurrent feature in affected subjects. Few data, however, are available on electroclinical features of POGZ-related epilepsy. We report a 5-year-old girl with a de novo inactivating POGZ mutation with a complex neurological phenotype characterized by
hypotonia
, severe developmental delay, and paroxysmal epileptic and nonepileptic events. Comparing this patient with the previously reported nine cases exhibiting epilepsy as associated feature, we detected that epilepsy onset is mostly during infancy (1-4 years of age), with both focal and generalized seizures. EEGs reveal that epileptic abnormalities mainly are localized in the frontal regions, and seizure control might be reached with one or multiple antiepileptic drugs. Besides dysmorphic features and other comorbidities (microcephaly, intellectual disability, absent speech, sensorineural hearing loss, and autistic spectrum disorder) major brain MR features include cortical and cerebellar atrophy, delayed myelination, and brainstem hypoplasia. Although the small number of patients reported, we were able to delineate primary electroclinical epileptic phenotype related to POGZ mutations. This would be crucial for an early identification and management of the condition.
...
PMID:POGZ-related epilepsy: Case report and review of the literature. 3113 90