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Query: UMLS:C0028754 (
obesity
)
124,988
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Rearrangement of the proximal long arm of chromosome 15 have been found in most patients with the Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) and in some with
Angelman syndrome
. We present an individual with syndromic
obesity
and her normal mother, who both have an abnormal chromosome 15. The proposita is a 26-year-old women with marked
obesity
, acanthosis, nigricans, short fingers, and severe cone degeneration of the retina. She has high plasma insulin levels, hypothyroidism, and an empty sella on CT scan. High-resolution chromosome banding demonstrated an increase in band 15q12. Further analysis showed the same abnormal 15 in her normal mother but not in her normal sister. This case and recent reports in the literature indicate that duplication of chromosome 15q in the PWS region may be associated with a syndrome of
obesity
, acanthosis nigricans, empty sella, and rodcore dystrophy as well as with a normal phenotype. Whether normal individuals with such a duplication carry increased risk of having offspring with an
obesity
syndrome is yet to be determined.
...
PMID:Rearrangement of chromosome 15 in the region q11.2----q12 in an individual with obesity syndrome and her normal mother. 224 82
Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is the most common form of dysmorphic genetic
obesity
associated with mental retardation. About 60% of cases have a cytological deletion of chromosome 15q11q13 (refs 2, 3). These deletions occur de novo exclusively on the paternal chromosome. By contrast,
Angelman syndrome (AS)
is a very different clinical disorder and is also associated with deletions of region 15q11q13 (refs 6-8), indistinguishable from those in PWS except that they occur de novo on the maternal chromosome. The parental origin of the affected chromosomes 15 in these disorders could, therefore, be a contributory factor in determining their clinical phenotypes. We have now used cloned DNA markers specific for the 15q11q13 subregion to determine the parental origin of chromosome 15 in PWS individuals not having cytogenetic deletions; these individuals account for almost all of the remaining 40% of PWS cases. Probands in two families displayed maternal uniparental disomy for chromosome 15q11q13. This is the first demonstration that maternal heterodisomy--the presence of two different chromosome 15s derived from the mother--can be associated with a human genetic disease. The absence of a paternal contribution of genes in region 15q11q13, as found in PWS deletion cases, rather than a mutation in a specific gene(s) in this region may result in expression of the clinical phenotype. Thus, we conclude that a gene or genes in region 15q11q13 must be inherited from each parent for normal human development.
...
PMID:Genetic imprinting suggested by maternal heterodisomy in nondeletion Prader-Willi syndrome. 281 27
Two unrelated females, age 15 and 5 years respectively, were studied cytogenetically because of severe mental retardation, seizures and ataxia-like incoordination. A similar deletion of the proximal long arm of chromosome 15 was found in both patients. Re-evaluation showed no voracious appetite or
obesity
; normal size of hands and feet, minimal to no hypotonia by history or examination and facial features not typical of the Prader-Willi syndrome. However, the facial appearance of the girls was similar to each other with mild hypertelorism. The similarity of these girls and dissimilarity to Prader-Willi syndrome suggest a different syndrome, perhaps the result of deletion of a different segment of 15q. The findings of ataxic-like movements, frequent, unprovoked and prolonged bouts of laughter and facial appearance are more compatible with the diagnosis of
Angelman syndrome
.
...
PMID:Is Angelman syndrome an alternate result of del(15)(q11q13)? 368 21
Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) is a disorder characterized by neonatal hypotonia with poor suck, mild to moderate mental retardation,
obesity
beginning after 3 yr of age, hypogonadism and characteristic facial features. High resolution cytogenetic studies showed a deletion of the proximal chromosome 15q(q11-q13) region in approximately 50%. Interestingly, the same deletion was described in another distinct mental disorder: the
Angelman syndrome (AS)
. This deletion was confirmed by molecular analyses, and a new mechanism was reported: uniparental disomy (maternal in PWS and paternal in AS) strongly implicate genomic imprinting in this chromosomal region. The principal aim of our group is to apply cytogenetic and molecular biology techniques to perform diagnosis and genetic counselling. Patient studies were usually based on high resolution cytogenetic analysis, quantitative Southern blotting (with D15S9, D15S11, D15S10, D15S12 loci) and dinucleotide repeat polymorphism assay by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) (IR4 .3R and GABARB3). The combination of these different methods allowed us to propose a diagnostic strategy for PWS.
...
PMID:Prader-Willi syndrome: diagnostic strategy with a cytogenetic and molecular approach. 791 May 2
Prader-Willi syndrome is characterized by hypotonia and feeding difficulties in the neonatal period, with the childhood development of hyperphagia leading to
obesity
, developmental delay, hypogonadism, short stature and small hands and feet. Correct diagnosis of Prader-Willi syndrome is important because of its clinical implications and the need for family genetic counseling. In order to determine the most efficient method of diagnosing the condition, we evaluated 37 patients with a putative diagnosis of Prader-Willi syndrome by both clinical and molecular cytogenetic analyses. Clinical evaluation showed that 25 patients fulfilled the diagnostic criteria for Prader-Willi syndrome. A deletion of the region 15q11.2-13 was cytogenetically identified in 20 patients using a high-resolution technique. Four additional cases were detected by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) with the cosmid probes for D15S11, r-aminobutyric acid receptor beta 3 (GABRB3), small nuclear ribonucleoprotein-associated peptide N (SNRPN) or D15S10 (Prader-Willi/
Angelman syndrome
region probes). The deletion of SNRPN was documented in 24 Prader-Willi syndrome patients. Only one additional patient with typical Prader-Willi syndrome features did not have any deletion over 15q11-13 at either the cytogenetic or molecular level. FISH provides a more reliable method than high-resolution chromosome analysis for the diagnosis of Prader-Willi syndrome. Associated conditions such as hypopigmentation, small-joint laxity, arachnodactyly, seizure disorder, optic atrophy, congenital heart disease, Perthes' disease, hirsutism, astigmatism/amblyopia, microcephaly and neuropsychiatric disturbances dictate the effects of a contiguous gene syndrome. Morbidity is high among patients with
obesity
and associated conditions. Appropriate genetic counseling should be given to the parents and dietary management should be helpful for patients with Prader-Willi syndrome.
...
PMID:Prader-Willi syndrome: clinical and molecular cytogenetic investigations. 877 55
Angelman syndrome (AS)
is characterized by severe psychomotor retardation, speech impairment, happy disposition with bursts of laughter, ataxia, convulsions, and some distinct physical anomalies. Correct diagnosis of AS is important because of its clinical implications, and once the disease is confirmed, familial genetic counseling becomes crucial. We evaluated 22 patients with a putative diagnosis of AS by both clinical and molecular cytogenetic analysis. A deletion of the region 15q11-13 could be identified cytogenetically in 11 cases by high-resolution technique (group I). Four additional cases were confirmed by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) study with D15S11, SNRPN, D15S10, and GABRB 3 [Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS)/AS region probes] (group II). The common deletion of GABRB 3 was documented in those AS cases (n = 15) by FISH. The other 7 cases exhibited no deletion over 15q11-13 at either the cytogenetic or molecular level (group III). We compared the following associated neurological disorders: convulsions and abnormal EEG, microcephaly, sleep and behavior problems, brain anomalies proved by image studies, sexual precocity with pineal tumor among the three groups, as well as other clinical conditions including congenital heart disease,
obesity
, scoliosis, and hypopigmentation. In the present study, the differences in neurological and facial characteristics were not distinct among these groups. However, the associated conditions were more frequently observed in the patients with deletion than in those without deletion. The EEG features of AS appear to be less sufficient in helping identify patients at an early age before the clinical features become obvious. Therefore, a region involved in the major As phenotypes may contain only one or more tightly contiguous genes around the GABRB 3 locus, which may explain the clinical heterogeneity in AS.
...
PMID:Angelman syndrome assessed by neurological and molecular cytogenetic investigations. 904 96
We had previously described a patient with an overgrowth syndrome and the chromosome constitution 45,XY,t(15q15q) (Wajntal et al., DNA Cell Biol 1993: 12: 227-231). Clinical reassessment and the use of molecular studies, including methylation analysis with an SNRPN probe, microsatellite analyses of D15S11, GABRB3 and D15S113 loci, and fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) using the SNRPN and GABRB3 probes, are consistent with a diagnosis of
Angelman syndrome (AS)
due to paternal isodisomy. This is the fourth report case of a translocation 15q15q with paternal uniparental disomy (UPD). Our findings suggest that some patients with clinical features of AS have hyperphagia and
obesity
with overgrowth, and that these features should not rule out a diagnosis of AS.
...
PMID:Unusual clinical features in an Angelman syndrome patient with uniparental disomy due to a translocation 15q15q. 983 41
We report on a patient presenting with mental retardation and
obesity
and a proximal duplication of chromosome 15. The patient shared some clinical signs with Prader-Willi syndrome. With a region-specific paint, generated by microdissection, a duplication in region 15q11.2-q13 was shown to be present. Subsequently, FISH with probes localized to chromosome region 15q11.2-q12 and microsatellite analysis was used to characterize this chromosome aberration further and an insertion duplication within the region frequently deleted in Prader-Willi and
Angelman syndrome
was demonstrated.
...
PMID:Duplication within chromosome region 15q11-q13 in a patient with similarities to Prader-Willi syndrome confirmed by region-specific and band-specific fish. 1042 4
The clinical features of
Angelman syndrome (AS)
comprise severe mental retardation, postnatal microcephaly, macrostomia and prognathia, absence of speech, ataxia, and a happy disposition. We report on seven patients who lack most of these features, but presented with
obesity
, muscular hypotonia and mild mental retardation. Based on the latter findings, the patients were initially suspected of having Prader-Willi syndrome. DNA methylation analysis of SNRPN and D15S63, however, revealed an AS pattern, ie the maternal band was faint or absent. Cytogenetic studies and microsatellite analysis demonstrated apparently normal chromosomes 15 of biparental inheritance. We conclude that these patients have an imprinting defect and a previously unrecognised form of AS. The mild phenotype may be explained by an incomplete imprinting defect or by cellular mosaicism.
...
PMID:A previously unrecognised phenotype characterised by obesity, muscular hypotonia, and ability to speak in patients with Angelman syndrome caused by an imprinting defect. 1085 4
Angelman syndrome (AS)
and Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) are distinct human neurogenetic disorders; however, a clinical overlap between AS and PWS has been identified. We report on a further case of a patient showing the PWS phenotype with the AS molecular defect. Despite the PWS phenotype, the DNA methylation analysis of SNRPN revealed an AS pattern. Cytogenetic and FISH analysis showed normal chromosomes 15 and microsatellite analysis showed heterozygous loci inside and outside the 15q11-13 region. The presence of these atypical cases could be more frequent than previously expected and we reinforce that the DNA methylation analysis is important for the correct diagnosis of severe mental deficiency, congenital hypotonia and
obesity
.
...
PMID:A further case of a Prader-Willi syndrome phenotype in a patient with Angelman syndrome molecular defect. 1256 98
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