Jacobsen syndrome (JBS) is a rare chromosomal disorder caused by terminal deletion of the long arm of chromosome 11. We report on four prenatally diagnosed patients with JBS with variable prenatal and postnatal phenotypes and 11q deletions of varying sizes. Precise characterization of the deleted region in three patients was performed by SNP arrays. The severity of both the prenatal and postnatal phenotypes did not correlate with the size of the haploinsufficient region. Despite the large difference in the deletion size (nearly 6 Mb), both of the live-born patients had similar phenotypes corresponding to JBS. However, one of the most prominent features of JBS, thrombocytopenia, was only present in the live-born boy. The girl, who had a significantly longer deletion spanning all four genes suspected of being causative of JBS-related thrombocytopenia (FLI1, ETS1, NFRKB, and JAM3), did not manifest a platelet phenotype. Therefore, our findings do not support the traditional view of deletion size correlation in JBS or the causative role of FLI1, ETS1, NFRKB, and JAM3 deletion per se for the development of disease-related thrombocytopenia.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/ajmg.a.35537 | DOI Listing |
Trials
December 2024
Department of Psychology, University of Bath, Bath, UK.
Background: Paranoia, the belief that you are at risk of significant physical or emotional harm from others, is a common difficulty, which causes significant distress and impairment to daily functioning, including in psychosis-spectrum disorders. According to cognitive models of psychosis, paranoia may be partly maintained by cognitive processes, including interpretation biases. Cognitive bias modification for paranoia (CBM-pa) is an intervention targeting the bias towards interpreting ambiguous social scenarios in a way that is personally threatening.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: As set out in Sustainable Development Goal 3.3, the target date for ending the HIV epidemic as a public health threat is 2030. Therefore, there is a crucial need to evaluate current epidemiological trends and monitor global progress towards HIV incidence and mortality reduction goals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPharmacoepidemiol Drug Saf
December 2024
Medicines Department, Centre for Health Protection, National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), Bilthoven, The Netherlands.
Purpose: The European Medicines Agency (EMA) issued regulatory actions and communications in 2021 on thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS) associated with adenovirus vector vaccines Vaxzevria or Jcovden. This study aimed to evaluate the impact of these actions on awareness, knowledge and implementation in practises of healthcare professionals (HCP).
Methods: Web-based cross-sectional surveys were conducted on HCPs engaged in the vaccination, monitoring or counselling about the vaccines.
Stem Cell Res
December 2024
Goethe University, Department of Pediatrics, Division for Stem Cell Transplantation and Immunology, Frankfurt/Main, Germany.
Leukocyte Adhesion Deficiency Type I (LAD I) is a rare inborn error of immunity caused by mutations in the ITGB2 gene coding for β2-integrin CD18 on the surface of leukocytes. Affected patients display severe clinical manifestations with life threatening infections and inflammatory complications due to an impaired ability of leukocytes to transmigrate from the blood vessel to the tissue. Here we describe the generation of eight induced pluripotent stem cell lines from two patients with LAD I and mutations in the ITGB2 gene.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTaiwan J Obstet Gynecol
November 2024
Department of Medical Research, MacKay Memorial Hospital, Taipei, Taiwan.
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