Publications by authors named "Evangelia Lykopoulou"

Purpose: IGSF1 deficiency syndrome (immunoglobulin superfamily member 1) is considered the most common sex-linked cause of secondary congenital hypothyroidism and is characterized by a wide variety of other clinical and biochemical features, including hypoprolactinemia, transient and partial growth hormone deficiency, early/normal timing of testicular enlargement but delayed testosterone rise in puberty, and adult macro-orchidism. Congenital central hypothyroidism is a rare disease (1:65,000 births); the detection of which may be delayed and missed by neonatal screening programs since most neonatal screening programs are based on TSH determination in dried blood spots only. Untreated hypothyroidism may cause abnormal liver biochemistry and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.

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McCune-Albright syndrome (MAS) is a rare sporadic condition defined by the classic triad of fibrous dysplasia of bone, café au lait skin macules, and hyperfunctioning endocrinopathies. The molecular basis of MAS has been ascribed to the post-zygotic somatic gain-of-function mutations in the gene, which encodes the alpha subunit of G proteins, leading to constitutive activation of several G Protein-Coupled Receptors (GPCRs). The co-occurrence of two of the above-mentioned cardinal clinical manifestations sets the diagnosis at the clinical level.

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Article Synopsis
  • Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome (BWS) is a rare disorder in children characterized by overgrowth and caused by issues with imprinted genes on chromosome 11p15, particularly affecting the IGF2/H19 locus.
  • A case study describes a male patient and his mother, both of whom have a large maternally inherited deletion in the ICR1 region, leading to differing severities of BWS symptoms.
  • The deletion impacts CTCF binding due to the loss of the ICR1-DMR and alters methylation patterns at the IGF2 locus, indicating complexities in the genetic regulation associated with BWS.
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