Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0917816 (mental retardation)
15,867 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The distal part of the human dystrophin gene is characterised by particular features and seems to play an important functional role. Additionally in recent years several data have implicated minor mutations in this gene region in some patients with mental retardation (MR). In order to screen for pathogenic mutations at the distal part of the human dystrophin gene we have used single-strand conformation analysis of products amplified by polymerase chain reaction (PCR-SSCA) in 35 unrelated male Greek DMD/BMD patients with no detectable deletions. Seven patients also had severe mental retardation. Direct sequencing of samples demonstrating a shift of SSCA mobility revealed six different and pathogenic minor changes, five in DMD and one in a BMD patient. Four of the mutations were found in DMD patients with severe MR. Three of these mutations were localised in exon 66, which presents an interesting similarity with part of the 3' end of the genome of eastern equine encephalomyelitis virus (EEEV). The present data from Greek DMD/BMD patients give further information about the phenotypic effects consequent on mutations in exons at the distal part of the human dystrophin gene.
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PMID:Screening for minor changes in the distal part of the human dystrophin gene in Greek DMD/BMD patients. 1019 1

Linkage analysis was performed on a four-generation family with nonspecific mental retardation (MRX59). The five affected males, ranging in age from 2 years to 52 years, have a normal facial appearance and mild to severe mental impairment. Four obligate carriers are physically normal and not retarded. A maximum LOD score of 2.41 at straight theta = 0.00 was observed with the microsatellite markers, DMD45 in Xp21.2, DXS989 in Xp22.1, and DXS207 in Xp22.2. Recombinations were detected within the dystrophin gene (DMD) in one of the affected males and between DXS207 and DXS987 in Xp22.2 in one of the carriers. These recombinants define the proximal and distal boundaries of a candidate gene region. Genetic localization of this familial condition made prenatal diagnosis informative for one of the obligate carriers.
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PMID:Regional localization of a nonspecific X-linked mental retardation gene (MRX59) to Xp21.2-p22.2. 1039 41

Severe mental retardation is a rare complication of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). Here we report that two DMD cases showing severe mental retardation exhibit the same exon skipping event induced by different intron mutations. In the two Japanese DMD patients studied, the complete sequence of exon 66 of the dystrophin gene was found to be absent from the dystrophin mRNA, creating a premature stop codon in exon 67. Novel point mutations at the consensus sequence of the splice donor site of intron 66 (T9857(+2) to C in one case and G9857(+5) to T in the other case) were found to be the cause of complete exon skipping. Remarkably, severe mental retardation cosegregated with an exon 66-skipping event in their families. Furthermore, pachygyria was disclosed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) examination of the brain of one case. Our results suggested that exon 66 skipping should be examined in DMD cases with a severe form of mental retardation.
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PMID:Complete skipping of exon 66 due to novel mutations of the dystrophin gene was identified in two Japanese families of Duchenne muscular dystrophy with severe mental retardation. 1072 62

Mental retardation is a clinical feature present in both Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophy patients and its pathogenesis is still unknown. Dp140 is a dystrophin isoform with predominant expression during foetal brain development. Its promoter and first exon lie in the large intron between exon 44 and 45, a region that is commonly deleted in dystrophinopathic patients. We performed neuropsychological evaluation and genetic analysis of the Dp140 transcription unit on 12 Duchenne muscular dystrophy and 28 Becker muscular dystrophy patients carrying deletions in this critical region. Comparison of neuropsychological and molecular data showed that there is a statistically significant relationship between the loss of Dp140 transcription unit and mental retardation in Becker muscular dystrophy patients (P = 0.008). Such a correlation is not evident in Duchenne muscular dystrophy patients but only shows a trend towards significance (P = 0.063). It is worth noting that both Duchenne muscular dystrophy and Becker muscular dystrophy patients with normal intelligence do not show deletions in the Dp140 regulatory regions. In the light of these findings, we suggest that impairment of cognitive abilities in Duchenne muscular dystrophy and Becker muscular dystrophy patients might be related to a dysfunction of Dp140 brain isoform.
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PMID:Loss of Dp140 regulatory sequences is associated with cognitive impairment in dystrophinopathies. 1073 67

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) and the allelic disorder Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) are common X-linked recessive neuromuscular disorders that are associated with a spectrum of genetically based developmental cognitive and behavioral disabilities. Seven promoters scattered throughout the huge DMD/BMD gene locus normally code for distinct isoforms of the gene product, dystrophin, that exhibit nervous system developmental, regional and cell-type specificity. Dystrophin is a complex plasmalemmal-cytoskeletal linker protein that possesses multiple functional domains, autosomal and X-linked homologs and associated binding proteins that form multiunit signaling complexes whose composition is unique to each cellular and developmental context. Through additional interactions with a variety of proteins of the extracellular matrix, plasma membrane, cytoskeleton and distinct intracellular compartments, brain dystrophin acquires the capability to participate in the modulatory actions of a large number of cellular signaling pathways. During neural development, dystrophin is expressed within the neural tube and selected areas of the embryonic and postnatal neuraxis, and may regulate distinct aspects of neurogenesis, neuronal migration and cellular differentiation. By contrast, in the mature brain, dystrophin is preferentially expressed by specific regional neuronal subpopulations within proximal somadendritic microdomains associated with synaptic terminal membranes. Increasing experimental evidence suggests that in adult life, dystrophin normally modulates synaptic terminal integrity, distinct forms of synaptic plasticity and regional cellular signal integration. At a systems level, dystrophin may regulate essential components of an integrated sensorimotor attentional network. Dystrophin deficiency in DMD/BMD patients and in the mdx mouse model appears to impair intracellular calcium homeostasis and to disrupt multiple protein-protein interactions that normally promote information transfer and signal integration from the extracellular environment to the nucleus within regulated microdomains. In DMD/BMD, the individual profiles of cognitive and behavioral deficits, mental retardation and other phenotypic variations appear to depend on complex profiles of transcriptional regulation associated with individual dystrophin mutations that result in the corresponding presence or absence of individual brain dystrophin isoforms that normally exhibit developmental, regional and cell-type-specific expression and functional regulation. This composite experimental model will allow fine-level mapping of cognitive-neurogenetic associations that encompass the interrelationships between molecular, cellular and systems levels of signal integration, and will further our understanding of complex gene-environmental interactions and the pathogenetic basis of developmental disorders associated with mental retardation.
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PMID:Brain dystrophin, neurogenetics and mental retardation. 1075 78

We report a 53-year-old Japanese male with a 47,XXX karyotype. His clinical features included hypoplastic scrotal testes (4 ml bilaterally), normally formed small penis (3.8 cm), relatively poor pubic hair development (Tanner stage 3), gynecomastia, age-appropriate male height (159.1 cm), and mental retardation (verbal IQ of 56). Serum testosterone was markedly reduced (0.6 nmol/L). A needle biopsy showed severe testicular degeneration. FISH analysis revealed complex mosaicism consisting of (1) 47,XXX cells with a single copy of SRY (n = 177), two copies of SRY (n = 3), and no SRY (n = 1); (2) 46,XX cells with a single copy of SRY (n = 9) and no SRY (n = 3); (3) 45,X cells with no SRY (n = 5); and (4) 48,XXXX cells with a single copy of SRY (n = 1) and two copies of SRY (n = 1). PCR analysis showed the presence of Yp portion with the breakpoint between DYS264 and AMELY. Microsatellite analysis demonstrated three alleles for DMD and AR. X-inactivation analysis for the methylation status of the AR gene showed random inactivation of the three X chromosomes. The results suggest that this 47,XXX male has resulted from abnormal X-Y interchange during paternal meiosis and X-X nondisjunction during maternal meiosis. Complex mosaicism may be due to the age-related increase in mitotic nondisjunction which is prone to occur in rapidly dividing lymphocytes and to the presence of two randomly inactivated X chromosomes which may behave asynchronously during mitosis, and clinical features of this male would primarily be explained by the genetic information on the SRY (+) der(X) chromosome and his advanced age.
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PMID:47,XXX male: A clinical and molecular study. 1117 81

Duchenne/Becker muscular dystrophy (DMD/BMD) are the most common inherited muscular diseases caused by mutations in the dystrophin gene. The identification of novel dystrophins in the brain has recently implicated its absence or malfunction etiologically in mental retardation (MR). We therefore examined the relationship between molecular abnormalities and clinical phenotypes. Deletions of the dystrophin gene were analyzed in a total of 137 DMD/BMD patients (DMD 94, BMD 43) to determine central nervous system (CNS) symptoms. The mental capacity was assessed and patients with IQs below 70 were defined as mentally retarded. Thirty-nine percent of DMD boys and 12% of BMD patients were classified as mentally retarded. Eight DMD and 2 BMD patients were diagnosed as having autism. Forty-four percent of DMD and 79% of BMD patients had deletions in the dystrophin gene. All the DMD/BMD patients with deletions upstream of the 5' end of the gene were mentally normal. All of DMD/BMD patients with MR and/or autism had deletions containing the 3' end, although some patients with similar deletions were mentally normal. Our data suggest that Dp140, Dp71 and/or Dp116, the C-terminal translational products of dystrophin, may be related to MR and/or autism in DMD/BMD. However, there was an exception in our series. Three of eight sibling pairs in our cases had different phenotypes, although they had the same mutations in the dystrophin gene. Thus the CNS phenotypes were not determined by the mutations of dystrophin gene alone, and the interaction of dystrophin with other nuclear genes may play important roles.
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PMID:[Central nervous system involvements in Duchenne/Becker muscular dystrophy]. 1172 14

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), the most common inherited neuromuscular disorder, is characterized by progressive muscle wasting and weakness. One third of Duchenne patients suffer a moderate to severe, nonprogressive form of mental retardation. Mutations in the DMD gene are thought to be responsible, with the shorter isoforms of dystrophin implicated in its molecular brain pathogenesis. It is becoming clear that region-specific variations in dystrophin isoforms delegate the composition of the dystrophin-glycoprotein complex in brain, and hence, the function of the specific membrane assembly. Here we summarize the recent advances in the understanding of brain dystrophin, dystrophin-related proteins and dystrophin-associated proteins.
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PMID:Diversity of the Brain Dystrophin-Glycoprotein Complex. 1248 97

Duchenne muscular dystrophy is characterized by a defect in dystrophin, which often causes mental retardation in addition to progressive muscular weakness. As dystrophin is localized in synaptic regions of the CNS, cognitive abnormalities associated with Duchenne muscular dystrophy are attributable to synaptic dysfunction. We report that dystrophin-deficient mdx mice were more resistant to kainic acid-induced seizures but not to GABA antagonist-induced seizures compared with the control mice. The kainic-acid receptor density in the brain was significantly lower in the mdx than in the control, although the density of muscarinic cholinergic receptors, another important neurotransmitter receptor for cognitive function, was normal. Moreover, mdx had significantly lower Timm staining intensity in the mossy fibers, which originate from the dentate granule cells and terminate on the pyramidal cells in the CA3 of the hippocampus. These results suggest that an instability of neurotransmitter receptors, such as kainate-type glutamate receptors, on synaptic membranes due to the disruption of dystrophin complex induces inefficient neurotransmission in Duchenne muscular dystrophy patients.
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PMID:Abnormal kainic acid receptor density and reduced seizure susceptibility in dystrophin-deficient mdx mice. 1261 79

We report the characterization of two deep intronic mutations in the Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) gene of two unrelated Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) patients, causing the aberrant inclusion of a pseudoexon in the mature transcripts. These two mutations were identified by the use of RT-PCR on transcripts isolated from muscle. The first abnormally large transcript resulting from a 58-bp insertion between exon 62 and exon 63 was identified in a BMD patient with mental retardation. The origin of this transcript was a mutation in intron 62 (IVS62-285A>G), which resulted in the occurrence of a high quality donor splice site. The IVS25+2036A>G in intron 25 was identified in a subclinical BMD patient with high CK levels. The mutation reinforces the strength of a pre-existing acceptor splice site, resulting in activation of an intronic pseudoexon of 95 bp. By using DHPLC, the patient's mother was found to be a somatic mosaic. The insertion of these newly recognized extra exons leads to premature termination codons, but we could observe that some degree of normal splicing was taking place in both patients. The detection of these residual full length transcripts is consistent with the clinical presentation and dystrophin analyses. This is the first report of pseudoexon activation as a mechanism for Becker muscular dystrophy, and this reveals further the diversity of genetic abnormalities causing BMD.
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PMID:Pseudoexon activation in the DMD gene as a novel mechanism for Becker muscular dystrophy. 1275 7


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