Publications by authors named "Susan Cure"

Background: Bathing suit ichthyosis (BSI) and self-improving collodion ichthyosis (SICI) are 2 minor variants of generalized autosomal recessive congenital ichthyosis. Bathing suit ichthyosis is characterized by scaling of the skin in a bathing suit pattern, mainly limited to the trunk, whereas SICI is characterized by complete disappearance of the skin lesions.

Observations: We report genotypic and phenotypic data from a series of 9 patients who were collodion babies and developed BSI or SICI owing to mutations in the transglutaminase-1 gene (TGM1), including 3 previously unreported missense mutations.

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Antecedents of Escherichia coli B have been traced through publications, inferences, and personal communication to a strain from the Institut Pasteur in Paris used by d'Herelle in his studies of bacteriophages as early as 1918 (a strain not in the current collection). This strain appears to have passed from d'Herelle to Bordet in 1920, and from Bordet to at least three other laboratories by 1925. The strain that Gratia received from Bordet was apparently passed to Bronfenbrenner by 1924 and from him to Luria around 1941.

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Cutis laxa (CL) is a heterogeneous group of connective tissue disorders characterized by loose, sagging skin and variable involvement of other organs. Autosomal-dominant forms are relatively mild, and may be caused by mutations in the elastin gene, whereas the more severe recessive forms have been associated with mutations in the fibulin 4 and fibulin 5 genes, as well as in a vesicular ATPase subunit. We describe here a previously unreported autosomal-recessive form of CL caused by homozygous recessive mutations in exon 12 of the elastin gene (p.

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Mal de Meleda is a recessive, transgressive palmoplantar keratoderma for which we previously identified mutations in the gene encoding secreted lymphocyte antigen-6/urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor-related protein-1 (SLURP-1). In this report we describe two new mutations: (i) a founder mutation, which changes a conserved cysteine residue to tyrosine (C99Y) in a large inbred Tunisian pedigree, and (ii) a signal sequence mutation (W15R), which was homozygous in a German family and heterozygous in a Scottish patient. Four ancestral haplotypes were observed in 69 patients from countries around the Mediterranean basin, and an additional haplotype was found in the German and Scottish patients.

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Chromosome 14 is one of five acrocentric chromosomes in the human genome. These chromosomes are characterized by a heterochromatic short arm that contains essentially ribosomal RNA genes, and a euchromatic long arm in which most, if not all, of the protein-coding genes are located. The finished sequence of human chromosome 14 comprises 87,410,661 base pairs, representing 100% of its euchromatic portion, in a single continuous segment covering the entire long arm with no gaps.

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