Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:Q00604 (X-linked)
16,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The oto-palato-digital syndrome (OPD) is a rare X-linked disease with diagnostic skeletal features, conduction deafness, cleft palate and mild mental retardation. Differences in clinical presentation between families have led investigators to classify OPD into two subtypes: type I and type II. A linkage study performed in one family segregating for OPD I has recently suggested linkage to three marker loci: DXS15, DXS52 at Xq28, and DXS86 at Xq26. We have investigated an additional OPD I family for linkage by using distal chromosome Xq DNA probes. The linkage data and the analysis of recombination events that have occurred in this family excluded, definitively, the Xq26 region for OPD I, and provide further support for mapping the mutant gene close to the cluster of tightly linked markers DXS15, DXS52 and DXS305 at Xq28.
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PMID:Oto-palato-digital syndrome type I: further evidence for assignment of the locus to Xq28. 175 98

We describe a new multiple congenital anomaly/mental retardation (MCA/MR) syndrome in chromosomally normal sibs. Both had microcephaly, a "coarse" face with synophrys, ear anomalies, type B brachydactyly, nail dysplasia, skeletal anomalies, dwarfism, and mental retardation. Their mother had nail dysplasia, mild mental retardation, and short stature. An uncle, a younger brother of the mother, died at 17 years of age and also had a "coarse" face, digital anomalies, dwarfism, and severe mental retardation. The malformation complex in this family apparently has not been described previously, and the manifestations of the patients do not correspond to those of any known malformation syndrome. The disorder may be attributable to the pleiotropic effect of an autosomal dominant or an X-linked semidominant gene.
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PMID:A new syndrome of dwarfism, brachydactyly, nail dysplasia, and mental retardation in sibs. 233 12

Ataxia with spastic diplegia was seen in seven males of a Turkish family, obviously transmitted as an X-linked recessive trait. The first clinical sign in infancy was nystagmus; ataxia and pyramidal signs were noted at age 2-3 years. Patients were never able to walk. Dysarthria, orthopedic impairment, and mild mental retardation appeared later as the disorder progressed. Death occurred in the 3rd or 4th decade from infectious diseases. The syndrome resembles X-linked spinocerebellar ataxia and X-linked spastic paraplegia in some aspects but is different if compared with previously published reports. Laboratory and neurophysiological studies showed no abnormalities. Various aspects of X-linked ataxia are discussed: genetic heterogeneity is apparent from observations reported.
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PMID:Heterogeneity of X-linked recessive (spino)cerebellar ataxia with or without spastic diplegia. 281 91

The discovery of the Fragile X (fra(X] syndrome represents a major advance in our understanding of mild mental retardation. This X-linked syndrome is the most common hereditary form of mental retardation. Recent estimates find that approximately 1/981 males and 1/677 females carry the fra(X) chromosome. The majority of affected males are moderate to severely retarded, but about 20% are mildly retarded and about 5% are borderline. Approximately 20% of males who inherit the fra(X) chromosome are termed non-penetrant; they do not express it cytogenetically and are of normal intellect. About 1/3 of carrier females show mental impairment and about 10% are mildly retarded. We have found evidence for genetic heterogeneity based on linkage analysis to flanking DNA probes. Some large families show tight linkage between fra(X) and the flanking probe F9, while others show loose linkage. Preliminary findings indicate the linkage heterogeneity may also be related to cognition: affected males in tightly linked families tended to be mildly retarded.
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PMID:Genetics and expression of the fragile X syndrome. 289 23

Two sisters and their mother had a syndrome of microcephaly, cleft palate, and variable anomalies such as unusual facial appearance, hypotelorism, abnormal retinal pigmentation, maxillary hypoplasia, goiter, camptodactyly, mild mental retardation, and abnormal dermatoglyphics. This is an evidently dominantly inherited trait, either autosomal or X-linked.
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PMID:Dominantly inherited syndrome of microcephaly and cleft palate. 685 12

Males affected by one form of X-linked retardation possess the X-chromosomal marker fra(X)(q27) and are physically normal except for macro-orchidism. To relate possession of the marker X to phenotypic expression in female heterozygotes, we investigated 128 mildly retarded (IQ, 55 to 75) school-girls in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Seventy-two girls had no physical abnormalities and of these, five (7 per cent) carried the marker X. Investigation of relatives revealed retarded males in four of the five families. Pedigree and chromosomal analysis identified a further 18 heterozygotes; six were regarded as intellectually or educationally retarded. We conclude that expression of the X-linked mutation in female carriers contributes to mild mental retardation of girls, that those who are physically normal should be screened for the marker X, and that their relatives should be investigated in order to identify additional females with a high risk of conceiving affected males.
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PMID:Heterozygous expression of X-linked mental retardation and X-chromosome marker fra(X)(q27). 693 Dec 86

During an ongoing study on X-linked mental retardation, we ascertained a large family in which mild mental retardation was cosegregating with a fragile site at Xq27-28. Clinical, psychometric, cytogenetic, and molecular studies were performed. Apart from mild mental retardation, affected males and females did not show a specific clinical phenotype. Psychometric assessment of four representative affected individuals revealed low academic achievements, with verbal and performance IQs of 61-75 and 70-82, respectively. Cytogenetically the fragile site was always present in affected males and was not always present in affected females. With FISH the fragile site was located within the FRAXE region. The expanded GCC repeat of FRAXE was seen in affected males and females either as a discrete band or as a broad smear. No expansion was seen in unaffected males, whereas three unaffected females did have an enlarged GCC repeat. Maternal transmission of FRAXE may lead to expansion or contraction of the GCC repeat length, whereas in all cases of paternal transmission contraction was seen. In striking contrast to the situation in fragile X syndrome, affected males may have affected daughters. In addition, there appears to be no premutation of the FRAXE GCC repeat, since in the family studied here all males lacking the normal allele were found to be affected.
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PMID:Segregation of FRAXE in a large family: clinical, psychometric, cytogenetic, and molecular data. 797 54

MASA syndrome includes mental retardation, adducted thumbs, shuffling gait and aphasia or speech delay. MASA syndrome, X-linked hydrocephalus and X-linked spastic paraplegia have been linked to the same markers on Xq28 and perhaps represent variation in the clinical expression of the same gene or manifestations of different mutant alleles. The present family includes five males in two generations with borderline to mild mental retardation (5/5), speech delay (5/5), spastic paraplegia (5/5), adducted thumbs (2/5) and marked hydrocephalus (1/5). Of these males, four were evaluated by MRI or CT scan and all four were determined to have partial to complete agenesis of the corpus callosum (ACC). DNA studies confirm linkage to Xq28 probe St14 (DXS52) with a lod score of 2.86 and no recombination. It is not known if X-linked ACC is linked to the same Xq28 region.
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PMID:Agenesis of the corpus callosum associated with MASA syndrome. 830 64

We have identified a large Dutch kindred with a new form of X-linked nondysmorphic mild mental retardation. All affected males in this family show very characteristic abnormal behavior, in particular aggressive and sometimes violent behavior. Other types of impulsive behavior include arson, attempted rape, and exhibitionism. Attempted suicide has been reported in a single case. The locus for this disorder could be assigned to the Xp11-21 interval between DXS7 and DXS77 by linkage analysis using markers spanning the X chromosome. A maximal multipoint lod score of 3.69 was obtained at the monoamine oxidase type A (MAOA) locus in Xp11.23-11.4. Results of 24-h urine analysis in three affected males indicated a marked disturbance of monoamine metabolism. These data are compatible with a primary defect in the structural gene for MAOA and/or monoamine oxidase type B (MAOB). Normal platelet MAOB activity suggests that the unusual behavior pattern in this family may be caused by isolated MAOA deficiency.
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PMID:X-linked borderline mental retardation with prominent behavioral disturbance: phenotype, genetic localization, and evidence for disturbed monoamine metabolism. 801 11

Genetic loci for X-linked retinitis pigmentosa (XLRP) have been mapped between Xp11.22 and Xp22.13 (RP2, RP3, RP6, and RP15). The RP3 gene, which is responsible for the predominant form of XLRP in most Caucasian populations, has been localized to Xp21.1 by linkage analysis and the map positions of chromosomal deletions associated with the disease. Previous linkage studies have suggested that RP3 is flanked by the markers DXS1110 (distal) and OTC (proximal). Patient BB was thought to have RP because of a lesion at the RP3 locus, in addition to chronic granulomatous disease, Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), mild mental retardation, and the McLeod phenotype. This patient carried a deletion extending approximately 3 Mb from DMD in Xp21.3 to Xp21.1, with the proximal breakpoint located approximately 40 kb centromeric to DXS1110. The RP3 gene, therefore, is believed to reside between DXS1110 and the proximal breakpoint of the BB deletion. In order to refine the location of RP3 and to ascertain patients with RP3, we have been analyzing several XLRP families for linkage to Xp markers. Linkage analysis in an American family of 27 individuals demonstrates segregation of XLRP with markers in Xp21.1, consistent with the RP3 subtype. One affected mate shows a recombination event proximal to DXS1110. Additional markers within the DXS1110-OTC interval show that the crossover is between two novel polymorphic markers, DXS8349 and M6, both of which are present in BB DNA and lie centromeric to the proximal breakpoint. This recombination places the XLRP mutation in this family outside the BB deletion and redefines the location of RP3.
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PMID:A recombination outside the BB deletion refines the location of the X linked retinitis pigmentosa locus RP3. 865 20


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