Publications by authors named "Shelley Towner"

Purpose: We sought to delineate a multisystem disorder caused by recessive cysteine-rich with epidermal growth factor-like domains 1 (CRELD1) gene variants.

Methods: The impact of CRELD1 variants was characterized through an international collaboration utilizing next-generation DNA sequencing, gene knockdown, and protein overexpression in Xenopus tropicalis, and in vitro analysis of patient immune cells.

Results: Biallelic variants in CRELD1 were found in 18 participants from 14 families.

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The corpus callosum is a bundle of axon fibres that connects the two hemispheres of the brain. Neurodevelopmental disorders that feature dysgenesis of the corpus callosum as a core phenotype offer a valuable window into pathology derived from abnormal axon development. Here, we describe a cohort of eight patients with a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by a range of deficits including corpus callosum abnormalities, developmental delay, intellectual disability, epilepsy and autistic features.

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Context: CPE encodes carboxypeptidase E, an enzyme that converts proneuropeptides and propeptide hormones to bioactive forms. It is widely expressed in the endocrine and central nervous system. To date, 4 individuals from 2 families with core clinical features including morbid obesity, neurodevelopmental delay, and hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, harboring biallelic loss-of-function (LoF) CPE variants, have been reported.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates neurodevelopmental disorders linked to the PPP2R1A gene, focusing on 30 individuals with various de novo genetic variants.
  • The researchers found a range of developmental delays, from mild learning issues to severe intellectual disabilities, often accompanied by symptoms like language delays and hypotonia.
  • The findings suggest a broader clinical spectrum for PPP2R1A-related disorders and highlight how different variants impact patient severity and neurological function.
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Purpose: This study characterizes the clinical and genetic features of nine unrelated patients with de novo variants in the NR4A2 gene.

Methods: Variants were identified and de novo origins were confirmed through trio exome sequencing in all but one patient. Targeted RNA sequencing was performed for one variant to confirm its splicing effect.

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Homozygous and compound heterozygous pathogenic variants in have been recently associated with a spectrum of clinical presentations varying from a severe multisystem form of the disorder including intellectual disability, early infantile developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, retinal abnormalities and cardiac arrhythmias (IDDCA) to a milder form with language delay, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, cognitive impairment, with or without cardiac arrhythmia (LADCI). Approximately twenty patients have been described so far; here we report a novel case of a 2.5-year-old female who is a compound heterozygote for a frameshift and a missense variant in the gene.

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