Publications by authors named "Catherine L Mercer"

Tetralogy of Fallot (ToF) can be associated with a wide range of extracardiac anomalies, with an underlying etiology identified in approximately 10% of cases. Individuals affected with Myhre syndrome due to recurrent SMAD4 mutations frequently have cardiovascular anomalies, including congenital heart defects. In addition to two patients in the literature with ToF, we describe five additional individuals with Myhre syndrome and classic ToF, ToF with pulmonary atresia and multiple aorto-pulmonary collaterals, and ToF with absent pulmonary valve.

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Article Synopsis
  • Researchers studied lung development defects in neonates by analyzing samples from deceased infants with specific lung disorders.
  • They found genetic variants linked to the genes TBX4 and FGF10 in over half of the cases, indicating a possible genetic basis for the lethal lung conditions.
  • The study highlights the significance of TBX4-FGF10-FGFR2 signaling in lung development and provides insights into the genetic factors contributing to these severe lung abnormalities.
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Background: Familial Ebstein anomaly is a rare form of congenital heart disease. We report 7 individuals among 2 generations of 1 family with Ebstein anomaly. This family was first reported in 1991 by Balaji et al in which family members were also reported to have a mild skeletal phenotype.

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Congenital heart defects (CHD) are present in over 1% of all newborns and are the leading cause of birth-defect-related deaths in the United States. We describe two male subjects with CHD, one with an atrial septal defect, a ventricular septal defect, and pulmonary artery stenosis; and the other with tetralogy of Fallot and a right aortic arch, who carry partially overlapping, de novo deletions of chromosome 5q33. The maximum region of overlap between these deletions encompasses HAND1 and SAP30L, two genes that have previously been shown to play a role in cardiac development.

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Freeman-Sheldon syndrome, or distal arthrogryposis type 2A (DA2A), is an autosomal-dominant condition caused by mutations in MYH3 and characterized by multiple congenital contractures of the face and limbs and normal cognitive development. We identified a subset of five individuals who had been putatively diagnosed with "DA2A with severe neurological abnormalities" and for whom congenital contractures of the limbs and face, hypotonia, and global developmental delay had resulted in early death in three cases; this is a unique condition that we now refer to as CLIFAHDD syndrome. Exome sequencing identified missense mutations in the sodium leak channel, non-selective (NALCN) in four families affected by CLIFAHDD syndrome.

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Congenital heart defects (CHDs) are the most common birth defect worldwide and are a leading cause of neonatal mortality. Nonsyndromic atrioventricular septal defects (AVSDs) are an important subtype of CHDs for which the genetic architecture is poorly understood. We performed exome sequencing in 13 parent-offspring trios and 112 unrelated individuals with nonsyndromic AVSDs and identified five rare missense variants (two of which arose de novo) in the highly conserved gene NR2F2, a very significant enrichment (p = 7.

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Integrity of the long arm of the X chromosome is important for maintaining female fertility and several critical regions for normal ovarian function have been proposed. In order to understand further the importance of specific areas of the X chromosome, we describe a series of 20 previously unreported patients missing part of Xq in whom detailed phenotypic information has been gathered as well as precise chromosome mapping using array Comparative Genomic Hybridization. Features often associated with Turner syndrome were not common in our study and excluding puberty, menarche and menstruation, the phenotypes observed were present in only a minority of women and were not specific to the X chromosome.

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Background: Otocephaly or dysgnathia complex is characterised by mandibular hypoplasia/agenesis, ear anomalies, microstomia, and microglossia; the molecular basis of this developmental defect is largely unknown in humans.

Methods And Results: This study reports a large family in which two cousins with micro/anophthalmia each gave birth to at least one child with otocephaly, suggesting a genetic relationship between anophthalmia and otocephaly. OTX2, a known microphthalmia locus, was screened in this family and a frameshifting mutation was found.

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We report two brothers, their mother and a maternal cousin who had a distinctive facial phenotype, mild brachydactyly and prominence of the interphalangeal joints. One brother and the mother also had multiple ventricular extrasystoles. Six other relatives in four generations were probably affected on the basis of history and family photographs.

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