Publications by authors named "Heather L Ferguson"

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates balanced chromosomal abnormalities (BCAs) in 273 individuals with congenital anomalies using whole-genome sequencing to achieve higher resolution than traditional karyotyping.
  • The findings revealed that 93% of karyotypes were revised, with 21% of BCAs showing complexity not detectable by standard methods, highlighting the limitations of cytogenetics.
  • The research indicated that 33.9% of BCAs caused gene disruption tied to developmental issues, and some breakpoints affected crucial genomic regions, possibly worsening conditions like 5q14.3 microdeletion syndrome due to altered gene expression.
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Precisely regulated temporal and spatial patterns of gene expression are essential for proper human development. Cis-acting regulatory elements, some located at large distances from their corresponding genes, play a critical role in transcriptional control of key developmental genes and disruption of these regulatory elements can lead to disease. We report a three generation family with five affected members, all of whom have hearing loss, craniofacial defects, and a paracentric inversion of the long arm of chromosome 7, inv(7)(q21.

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Apparently balanced chromosomal rearrangements in individuals with major congenital anomalies represent natural experiments of gene disruption and dysregulation. These individuals can be studied to identify novel genes critical in human development and to annotate further the function of known genes. Identification and characterization of these genes is the goal of the Developmental Genome Anatomy Project (DGAP).

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Although somatic mutations in a number of genes have been associated with development of human tumors, such as lipomas, relatively few examples exist of germline mutations in these genes. Here we describe an 8-year-old boy who has a de novo pericentric inversion of chromosome 12, with breakpoints at p11.22 and q14.

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