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:C0086543 (
cataract
)
29,165
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A case of bilateral aniridia,
cataract
and mental deficiency is described in a girl with an interstitial deletion of the short arm of chromosome 11. The child died of pneumonia and on autopsy bilateral gonadoblastoma was detected, but no
Wilms' tumour
. Partial deletion of the short arm of chromosome 11 seems to be a clinically recognizable syndrome with aniridia,
cataract
and renal, gonadal or genital dysmorphogenesis.
...
PMID:Aniridia, cataract and gonadoblastoma in a mentally retarded girl with deletion of chromosome II. A clinicopathological case report. 61 91
Wilms
's tumour is a paediatric tumour of hereditary origin in 40% of cases. In children with
Wilms
's tumour associated congenital anomalies are frequent, particularly congenital anomalies of the kidney and urogenital tract. Over the period from 1972 to 1987 the authors carried out a prospective study and systematically investigated congenital major and minor anomalies in 24 children with
Wilms
's tumour. They revealed the presence of aniridia, bilateral
cataract
and cryptorchidism in 1/24 children, mental retardation, small stigated congenital major and minor anomalies in 40 chidism in 1/40 children, mental retardation, small stature and a cystic kidney in 1/40, mental retardation in 3/40. A detailed investigation of minor anomalies confirmed the presence of 2 to 3 anomalies in all observed children. Cytogenetic investigation was performed in all children. Only in a child with aniridia
Wilms
's tumour a cytogenetic anomaly, 11p deletion, was found.
...
PMID:[Major and minor congenital anomalies in children with Wilms' tumor]. 217 Nov 48
Aniridia is a rare panocular disorder which primarily involves not only the iris, but also the retina, optic nerve, lens and cornea. Visual acuity deteriorates as a result of nystagmus, glaucoma,
cataract
, corneal opacities and retinal hypoplasia. Aniridia may appear as an isolated disorder, most often familial with autosomal dominance or sporadically in association with at least 12 syndromes. Both familial isolated and
Wilms tumour
, bilateral sporadic aniridia, genitourinary abnormalities and mental retardation syndrome-associated aniridia have been traced to a mutation of the PAX6 gene on band 11p13. Since genetic diagnosis of this disorder is already possible, counselling affected families should be preceded by karyotype studies and linkage analysis in familial cases of isolated aniridia. In sporadic cases of isolated aniridia or WAGR syndrome, we suggest that PAX6 mutation analysis be employed.
...
PMID:Aniridia: recent achievements in paediatric practice. 852 75
Separation of chromatids of all mitotic chromosomes, here called total premature chromatid separation (total PCS), was observed in 67 to 87.5% of repeated cultures of peripheral blood lymphocytes from two unrelated infants. Also noted was a variety of mosaic aneuploidies, especially trisomies, double trisomies, and monosomies, to be called mosaic variegated aneuploidy. The infants both showed severe pre- and postnatal growth retardation, profound developmental retardation, uncontrollable seizures, severe microcephaly, hypoplasia of the brain, Dandy-Walker anomaly, abnormal facial appearance, and bilateral
cataract
. Patient 1, a girl, in addition had a cleft palate, multiple renal cysts, and
Wilms tumor
of the left kidney. Whereas patient 2, a boy, had ambiguous external genitalia. They both died within 2 years of age. In the two families of the infants, their parents and three other members showed 2.5 to 47% lymphocytes with total PCS but without mosaic variegated aneuploidy or phenotypic abnormalities. Another 10 relatives studied showed 0 to 1% cells with total PCS and so were judged negative for the total PCS trait. It was deduced that the total PCS trait in the two families was transmitted in an autosomal-dominant fashion, and the two affected infants were homozygous for the trait.
...
PMID:Mosaic variegated aneuploidy with multiple congenital abnormalities: homozygosity for total premature chromatid separation trait. 967 59
Aniridia (AN) is a sight-threatening congenital ocular disorder characterized by iris hypoplasia, corneal pannus, foveal and optic nerve hypoplasia,
cataract
formation, and glaucoma. In two-thirds of the patients, AN is inherited in an autosomal dominant fashion with almost complete penetrance but variable expression. The remaining cases are sporadic. Aniridia has been shown to be associated with mutations in the PAX6 gene, located on chromosome 11p13, telomeric to the
Wilms' tumor
predisposition gene (WT1). This paper describes 14 mutations in the PAX6 gene in patients with AN. Among these 14 mutations, 10 have been unpublished until now. They result most probably in haploinsufficiency and consequently in a reduced protein level of functional PAX6 protein. The mutations reported here are scattered all over the gene, including the paired-box, the glycine-rich region, the homeobox, and the proline-serine-threonine (PST)-rich region.
...
PMID:Ten novel mutations found in Aniridia. 979 6
Aniridia is a congenital developmental anomaly of the eye that usually affects both eyes. The development of the iris, cornea, lens, angle, optic nerve and retina is disturbed. Aniridia is most often a hereditary disease with an autosomal dominant, rarely autosomal recessive inheritance, but sporadic cases are also possible. The vision function in aniridia has been observed to have a wide range from blindness to a normal visual acuity. The more serious cases where blindness occurs has been due not specifically to the aniridia but to associated conditions like
cataract
, glaucoma, foveal hypoplasia, corneal dystrophy, nystagmus. Aniridia could be associated with the mental retardation. Some of the sporadic cases develop
Wilms' tumor
, frequently as part of the WAGR syndrome (
Wilms' tumor
, aniridia, genitourinary abnormalities and mental retardation).
...
PMID:[Aniridia]. 1208 63
Aniridia,
Wilms tumor
, genitourinary abnormalities, growth and mental retardation are the cardinal features of the WAGR 11p13 deletion syndrome. The Potocki-Schaffer syndrome or proximal 11p deletion syndrome (previously DEFECT11 syndrome) is a contiguous gene syndrome associated with deletions in 11p11.2, principal features of which are multiple exostoses and enlarged parietal foramina. Mental handicap, facial dysmorphism and craniosynostosis may also be associated. We report a patient with combined WAGR and Potocki-Shaffer syndromes, and obesity. She presented with aniridia,
cataract
, nystagmus, corneal ulcers and bilateral congenital ptosis. A left
nephroblastoma
was detected at 15 months. Other features included moderate developmental delay, growth deficiency, facial dysmorphism, multiple exostoses and cranial lacunae. High-resolution and molecular cytogenetics confirmed a del(11)(p11.2p14.1) deletion with a proximal breakpoint between the cosmid DO8153 and the BAC RP11-104M24 to a distal breakpoint between cosmids CO8160 (D11S151) and F1238 (D11S1446). The deletion therefore includes EXT2, ALX4,
WT1
and PAX6. This case appears to be the second patient reported with this combined deletion syndrome and confirms the association of obesity in the WAGR spectrum, a feature previously reported in four cases, and for which the acronym WAGRO has been suggested. Molecular and follow-up data on the original WAGRO case are briefly presented.
...
PMID:Combination of WAGR and Potocki-Shaffer contiguous deletion syndromes in a patient with an 11p11.2-p14 deletion. 1570 31
Distinct eye abnormalities have been described in children with nephrotic syndrome, particularly in diffuse mesangial sclerosis (i.e. Pierson syndrome). The aim of the study was to investigate whether there were any associated ocular anomalies in children with steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome (SRNS), all of whom had revealed primary focal segmental glomerulosclerosis in biopsy. Thirty-three SRNS patients (16 male, 17 female) with a median age of 10.5 years (range 3-25 years) were enrolled in the study. Twenty steroid-sensitive nephrotic syndrome (SSNS) patients (ten male, ten female) with a median age of 8 years (range 3-15 years) served as controls. All SRNS patients were examined by mutational analysis for mutations in the NPHS2,
WT1
, and LAMB2 genes. Nine out of 33 SRNS patients (27.2%) showed various eye abnormalities. However, no abnormal ocular findings were detected in any of the SSNS patients. Abnormal eye findings detected in SRNS patients were anisometropic amblyopia (n = 4), Mittendorf's dots (n = 4), myopic astigmatism (n = 3) and exotropia (n = 1). Macular pigment changes (n = 1), posterior subcapsular opacities (n = 1) and
cataract
(n = 1) were considered as steroid-induced side effects. In four patients, more than one eye abnormality was found. Mutational analysis for the NPHS2,
WT1
and LAMB2 genes revealed disease-causing mutations in 24.2% of patients. Homozygous NPHS2 mutations were detected in five patients (15.1%), all of whom had parental consanguinity. In three patients (9%) from non-consanguineous parents, heterozygous de novo
WT1
mutations were detected as disease-causing mutations. No LAMB2 mutation was detected in any patient. While four out of five (80%) patients with homozygous NPHS2 mutations showed at least one abnormal ocular finding (i.e. Mittendorf's dot or anisometric amblyopia), none of the patients with a
WT1
mutation had ocular involvement. In conclusion, ocular involvement may accompany SRNS caused by primary focal segmental glomerulosclerosis (FSGS). Ophthalmologic evaluation at the time of diagnosis might be beneficial to characterize further the spectrum of this possible association.
...
PMID:Eye involvement in children with primary focal segmental glomerulosclerosis. 1805 36
Mosaic variegated aneuploidy (MVA) is a rare autosomal recessive syndrome related to BUB1B gene mutations and characterized by multiple mosaic aneuploidies, cancer predisposition, and a distinct phenotype. We report on two mildly affected sibs with MVA syndrome but without BUB1B mutation. Both patients exhibited growth retardation, frontal bossing, triangular face and micrognathia but not microcephaly or cancer. Aneuploidies were assessed both in G-banded metaphases from lymphocyte cultures and in interphase nuclei from buccal cells by FISH. Screening of 23 exons and intron-exon boundaries of BUB1B was also carried out. These patients were then compared with other 19 MVA patients screened for BUB1B mutations. Around one half of the cultured lymphocytes from our patients had aneuploidies ranging from nullisomies to heptasomies; the most frequent abnormalities were trisomies (42%) and monosomies (28%). FISH results demonstrated more chromosomal losses than gains. Screening of BUB1B in our two patients failed to identify any mutation. A review of the 21/35 patients screened for BUB1B demonstrated three clinical pictures. Patients with monoallelic BUB1B mutations were severely affected with Dandy-Walker complex (7/8), cataracts (6/6), and
Wilms' tumor
(7/8); premature chromatid separation (PCS) was observed in 8/8 propositi and 7/7 carrier parents. Patients without BUB1B mutations were mildly affected with no evidence of cancer, Dandy-Walker malformation or
cataract
, and rarely (1/7) showed PCS. Finally, patients with biallelic BUB1B mutations showed a moderate phenotype. The distinct MVA clinical groups delineated here point to involvement of at least another mitotic spindle checkpoint gene in addition to the BUB1B gene.
...
PMID:Clinical and genetic heterogeneity in patients with mosaic variegated aneuploidy: delineation of clinical subtypes. 1854 31
WAGR syndrome (
Wilms' tumor
, aniridia, genitourinary abnormalities and mental retardation) and Potocki-Shaffer syndrome are rare contiguous gene deletion syndromes caused by deletions of the 11p14-p12 chromosome region.We present a patient with mental retardation, unilateral
cataract
, bilateral ptosis, genital abnormalities, seizures and a dysmorphic face. Cytogenetic analysis showed a deletion on 11p that was further characterized using FISH and MLPA analyses. The deletion (11p13-p12) located in the area between the deletions associated with the WAGR and Potocki-Shaffer syndromes had a maximum size of 8.5 Mb and encompasses 44 genes. Deletion of
WT1
explains the genital abnormalities observed. As PAX6 was intact the
cataract
observed cannot be explained by a deletion of this gene. Seizures have been described in Potocki-Shaffer syndrome while mental retardation has been described in both WAGR and Potocki-Shaffer syndrome. Characterization of this patient contributes further to elucidate the function of the genes in the 11p14-p12 chromosome region.
...
PMID:11p Microdeletion including WT1 but not PAX6, presenting with cataract, mental retardation, genital abnormalities and seizures: a case report. 1922 35
1
2
Next >>