Publications by authors named "Ilya V Kanivets"

Rafiq syndrome (RAFQS) is a congenital disorder of glycosylation (CDG) that is caused by mutations in the MAN1B1 gene and characterized by impaired protein and lipid glycosylation. RAFQS is characterized by a delay in intellectual and motor development, facial and other dysmorphism, truncal obesity, behavior problems, and hypotonia. We describe a Russian patient with delayed intellectual and motor development, a lack of speech, disorientation in space and time, impaired attention and memory, and episodes of aggression.

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Inverted duplication syndrome with an adjacent terminal deletion of the short arm of chromosome 8-inv dup del(8p)-is a rare complex structural chromosomal rearrangement with a wide range of clinical manifestations. Molecular cytogenetic variants of chromosomal imbalance depend on the mechanism of rearrangement formation. We analyzed the clinical-genetic and molecular cytogenetic characteristics of the 8p inverted duplication/deletion syndrome, as well as the genotype-phenotype correlation in eight unrelated cases with the rearrangement of inv dup del(8p).

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Heterotrimeric G proteins are immediate transducers of G protein-coupled receptors-the biggest receptor family in metazoans-and play innumerate functions in health and disease. A set of de novo point mutations in and , the genes encoding the α-subunits (Gαo and Gαi1, respectively) of the heterotrimeric G proteins, have been described to cause pediatric encephalopathies represented by epileptic seizures, movement disorders, developmental delay, intellectual disability, and signs of neurodegeneration. Among such mutations, the Gln52Pro substitutions have been previously identified in and .

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A young boy with multifocal epilepsy with infantile spasms and hypsarrhythmia with minimal organic lesions of brain structures underwent DNA diagnosis using whole-exome sequencing. A heterozygous amino-acid substitution p.L519R in a PHACTR1 gene was identified.

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Background: Because of the significant occurrence of "WAGR-region" deletions among de novo mutations detected in congenital aniridia, DNA diagnosis is critical for all sporadic cases of aniridia due to its help in making an early diagnosis of WAGR syndrome. Standard cytogenetic karyotype study is a necessary step of molecular diagnostics in patients with deletions and in the patients' parents as it reveals complex chromosomal rearrangements and the risk of having another affected child, as well as to provide prenatal and/or preimplantation diagnostics.

Case Presentation: DNA samples were obtained from the proband (a 2-year-old boy) and his two healthy parents.

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High-throughput sequencing of fetal DNA is a promising and increasingly common method for the discovery of all (or all coding) genetic variants in the fetus, either as part of prenatal screening or diagnosis, or for genetic diagnosis of spontaneous abortions. In many cases, the fetal DNA (from chorionic villi, amniotic fluid, or abortive tissue) can be contaminated with maternal cells, resulting in the mixture of fetal and maternal DNA. This maternal cell contamination (MCC) undermines the assumption, made by traditional variant callers, that each allele in a heterozygous site is covered, on average, by 50% of the reads, and therefore can lead to erroneous genotype calls.

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Glutaric aciduria type 1 (GA1, deficiency of glutaryl CoA dehydrogenase, glutaric acidemia type 1) (ICD-10 code: E72.3; MIM 231670) is an autosomal recessive disease caused by mutations in the gene encoding the enzyme glutaryl CoA dehydrogenase (GCDH). Herein, we present the biochemical and molecular genetic characteristics of 51 patients diagnosed with GA1 from 49 unrelated families in Russia.

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Intellectual disability is the most common developmental disorder caused by chromosomal aberrations as well as single-nucleotide variants (SNVs) and small insertions/deletions (indels). Here we report identification of a novel, probably pathogenic mutation in the WHSC1 gene in a patient case with phenotype overlapping the features of Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome. Deletions involving WHSC1 (Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome candidate 1 gene) were described earlier in patients with Wolf-Hirschhorn syndrome.

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