Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
Enzyme
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Query: UMLS:C0917816 (
mental retardation
)
15,867
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The history of PKU is one of science in the discovery of an inborn error of metabolism and a chemical cause of
mental retardation
; and also one of technology with the development of methods to prevent disease. PKU is the classic example of success in the prevention of a genetic disease. Meanwhile, the science has continued to evolve over the 60 years since the discovery of PKU, generating new understanding of its clinical and metabolic phenotypes and about phenylalanine hydroxylation. At least five known genes are involved in hydroxylation of phenylalanine, synthesis of tetrahybrobiopterin and regeneration of this cofactor. The genes have been cloned and mutations characterized for several enzymes (GTPCH, 6-PTPS,
PHS
/DoCH, DHPR, PAH). A new animal model (the enu mouse) is contributing to knowledge about pathogenesis of brain disease and potential new treatments. The human phenylalanine hydroxylase gene (PAH) itself harbors 99% of the mutations causing hyperphenylalaninemia, over 170 different mutations have been identified at this locus. They cause loss of function; none affecting regulation has been identified. The aggregate PKU gene frequency at 1% is polymorphic in many human populations and mutations are highly stratified by region and population reflecting a variety of mechanisms (founder effect, genetic drift, hypermutability and, perhaps, selection) for their occurrence and distribution.
...
PMID:Whatever happened to PKU? 762 72
Pallister-Hall syndrome (
PHS
, MIM #146510) is characterized by central and postaxial polydactyly, hypothalamic hamartoma (HH), bifid epiglottis, imperforate anus, renal abnormalities, and pulmonary segmentation anomalies. It is inherited in an autosomal dominant pattern. Here, we describe a family with two affected children manifesting severe
PHS
with
mental retardation
, behavioral problems, and intractable seizures. Both parents are healthy, with normal intelligence, and have no malformations on physical, laryngoscopic, and cranial MRI exam. The atypical presentation of these children and the absence of parental manifestations suggested an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance or gonadal mosaicism. Sequencing of GLI3 revealed a two nucleotide deletion in exon 15 (c.3385_3386delTT) predicting a frameshift and premature stop at codon 1129 (p.F1129X) in the children while both parents have wild type alleles. Genotyping with GLI3 intragenic markers revealed that both children inherited the abnormal allele from their mother thus supporting gonadal mosaicism as the underlying mechanism of inheritance (paternity was confirmed). This is the first reported case of gonadal mosaicism in
PHS
. The severe CNS manifestations of these children are reminiscent of children with non-syndromic HH who often have progressive
mental retardation
with behavioral problems and intractable seizures. We conclude that the phenotypic spectrum of
PHS
can include severe CNS manifestations and that recurrence risks for
PHS
should include a proviso for gonadal mosaicism, though the frequency cannot be calculated from a single case report. Published 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
...
PMID:Gonadal mosaicism in severe Pallister-Hall syndrome. 1470 4
Pitt-Hopkins syndrome is a severe congenital encephalopathy recently ascribed to de novo heterozygous TCF4 gene mutations. We report a series of 13 novel
PHS
cases with a TCF4 mutation and show that EEG, brain magnetic resonance imagain (MRI), and immunological investigations provide valuable additional clues to the diagnosis. We confirm a mutational hot spot in the basic domain of the E-protein. Functional studies illustrate that heterodimerisation of mutant TCF4 proteins with a tissue-specific transcription factor is less effective than that homodimerisation in a luciferase reporter assay. We also show that the TCF4 expression pattern in human embryonic development is widespread but not ubiquitous. In summary, we further delineate an underdiagnosed
mental retardation
syndrome, highlighting TCF4 function during development and facilitating diagnosis within the first year of life.
...
PMID:Mutational, functional, and expression studies of the TCF4 gene in Pitt-Hopkins syndrome. 1923 38
We present the clinical and cytogenetic findings in an 8 year old girl with
mental retardation
, acquired microcephaly, delayed motor skills and stereotypical hand movements. Array comparative genomic hybridization identified a mosaic de novo deletion of approximately 7.505 Mb in chromosome region 18q21.1q21.31, resulting in the loss of one copy of the TCF4 gene as well as 29 other RefSeq genes. The deletion likely occurred early in development as this child has clinical symptoms affecting multiple organ systems, reminiscent of those observed in Pitt-Hopkins syndrome (
PHS
; OMIM 610954). This case represents the second known example of a mosaic deletion resulting in clinical symptoms consistent with Pitt-Hopkins syndrome, and illustrates the utility of genomic microarray analysis in detecting large mosaic imbalances that may otherwise be missed by G-band analysis.
...
PMID:Mosaic microdeletion 18q21 as a cause of mental retardation. 2081 11