Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0700208 (
scoliosis
)
8,574
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In this report we have described an affected sib in a large Turkish family who appears to have a new distinct dominantly-inherited blindness,
scoliosis
and arachnodactyly syndrome. The combination of clinical abnormalities in these patients did not initially suggest Marfan syndrome or other connective tissue disorders associated with ectopia lentis. The proband was a 16-year-old boy who was referred to our clinics for
scoliosis
. He had arachnodactyly of both fingers and toes. He had been suffering from progressive visual loss and strabismus since he was eight-years-old. His 20-year-old brother had severe kyphoscoliosis, and arachnodactyly of fingers and toes. He was 130 cm tall and was bilaterally blind. His 23-year-old sister had only eye findings but no arachnodactyly or
scoliosis
. His 60-year-old father had mild
scoliosis
, blindness and arachnodactyly and mother was normal. We performed routine mutation analyses in the genes FBN1,
TGFBR1
and TGFBR2, but no mutation has been detected. Our Turkish patients are most likely affected by a hitherto unrecorded condition which is caused by an autosomal dominant gene defect with variable expression but we can not exclude multigenic inheritance. Further studies are needed to assess the contribution of sex influence to the syndrome because the female relative is less affected.
...
PMID:Scoliosis, blindness and arachnodactyly in a large Turkish family: is it a new syndrome? 1899 Sep 88
Interstitial deletions involving the 15q21.1 band are very rare. Only 4 of these cases have been studied using molecular cytogenetic techniques in order to confirm the deletion of the whole FBN1 gene. The presence of clinical features of the Marfan syndrome (MFS) spectrum associated with mental retardation has been described in only 2/4 patients. Here we report on a 16-year-old female referred for suspicion of MFS (positive thumb and wrist sign,
scoliosis
, joint hyperlaxity, high-arched palate with dental crowding, dysmorphism, mitral insufficiency with dystrophic valve, striae). She had therefore 3 minor criteria according to the Ghent nosology. She also had speech disabilities but could follow normal school training. Direct sequencing of the FBN1,
TGFBR1
and TGFBR2 genes was negative. MLPA revealed a genomic deletion of the whole FBN1 gene, confirmed by loss of heterozygosity of maternal alleles for several microsatellite markers surrounding the FBN1 gene. The deletion was confirmed by FISH using a FBN1 probe and was not found in the parents. Array-CGH permitted to define a 2.97 Mb deletion, which was the smallest 15q microdeletion including FBN1. Contrary to the other published observations, our proband does not exhibit mental retardation, but neuropsychological evaluations revealed an attention deficit as well as a deficit in information-processing speed. Haploinsufficiency of FBN1 is likely to contribute to the presence of MFS features. However, attenuated features could be explained because disturbances of TGF-beta signalling associated with FBN1 mutations do not exert full phenotypic effect through simple haploinsufficiency. Phenotypic variability in other patients with interstitial deletions including 15q21.1 band may reflect differences in deletion size and/or cys/trans modifying factors.
...
PMID:De novo 15q21.1q21.2 deletion identified through FBN1 MLPA and refined by 244K array-CGH in a female teenager with incomplete Marfan syndrome. 2047 19
Loeys-Dietz syndrome (LDS), a connective tissue disorder characterized by its vascular, skeletal, craniofacial, and cutaneous manifestations is caused by mutations in one of six genes (
TGFBR1
, TGFBR2, SMAD2, SMAD3, TGFB2, and TGFB3). Until recently, all reported cases of LDS have been attributed to heterozygous pathogenic variants in these genes. Here, we report the first case of Loeys-Dietz syndrome due to SMAD3 biallelic likely pathogenic variants in a 15-year-old male with classic Loeys-Dietz features, including dysmorphic facial features, significant
scoliosis
, and pectus excavatum, arachnodactyly, severe aortic root dilation, and diffuse arterial tortuosity. His parents are each heterozygous for the likely pathogenic variant and are more mildly affected. To our knowledge, this represents the first reported case of biallelic SMAD3-related Loeys-Dietz syndrome and the third case in the literature of biallelic LDS, indicating that there are multiple genetic modes of inheritance underlying this disorder.
...
PMID:The first reported case of Loeys-Dietz syndrome in a patient with biallelic SMAD3 variants. 3293 39