185 results match your criteria: "John F. Kennedy Institute[Affiliation]"

Hyperphenylalaninemia due to a deficiency of hepatic phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) is the most common inborn error of amino acid metabolism. Clinically, the disorder is highly heterogeneous, spanning from nonphenylketonuria hyperphenylalaninemia to classical phenylketonuria. Only little is known about the molecular defects underlying hyperphenylalaninemia in Southern Europe.

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Paternal nondisjunction accounts for approximately 5% of cases of trisomy 21. We have studied 36 cases of free trisomy 21, in which the supernumerary chromosome was of paternal origin, with DNA markers in the pericentromeric region and along the long arm of chromosome 21. Fifteen of the paternal cases were consistent with meiosis II errors, 8 with mitotic errors and only 7 with meiosis I nondisjunction.

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Chromosomal aneusomy is a major cause of reproductive wastage and congenital malformations in man. Zinc finger encoding genes would be good candidates for being involved in the multiple developmental defects associated with chromosomal aneusomy--by virtue of their role as transcriptional regulators, their abundance in the genome and their known association with specific developmental disorders. We have isolated and mapped a zinc finger encoding cDNA (ZNF141) of the C2-H2/KRAB subfamily to the 4p- (Wolf-Hirschhorn) syndrome (WHS) chromosome region.

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A high frequency of spontaneous chromosomal breakage, endomitosis, endoreduplication and hypersensitivity toward both the alkylating agent Trenimon and the radiomimetric drug bleomycin was observed in phytohemagglutinin-stimulated peripheral lymphocytes from a girl with craniosynostosis, microcephaly, ptosis, bird-like facies, and moderate mental retardation. We also observed abnormal chromosomal spiralization and some aspects of abnormal cellular division. Several fruitless attempts were made to establish a cell line.

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We present a 2-year-old boy and a 6-year-old girl with mild Canavan disease (CD). Aspartoacylase activity in skin fibroblasts was deficient. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain did not show the prominent leucodystrophy previously reported in CD, but there was a hyperintense signal from the lentiform nuclei and the heads of the caudate nuclei on the T2-weighted MR images.

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We present the results of a comprehensive study on the molecular basis of phenylketonuria (PKU) in Denmark. A strategy relying on PCR in combination with denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis for analyzing the coding sequence and splice site junctions of the phenylalanine hydroxylase gene allowed us to detect a molecular defect on 99% of 308 Danish PKU chromosomes. The mutational spectrum consists of 35 different mutations, including 23 missense mutations, 5 splice mutations, 4 nonsense mutations, and 3 deletions.

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We have mapped the autosomal sex reversal locus, SRA1, associated with campomelic dysplasia (CMPD1) to 17q24.3-q25.1 by three independent apparently balanced de novo reciprocal translocations.

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A total of eight girls with Rett syndrome were examined, by 31phosphorous magnetic resonance spectroscopy (31P MRS) (4 girls), proton MRS (1H MRS) (4 girls), muscle biopsying (2 girls), and determination of pyruvate and lactate in plasma (5 girls), to investigate the hypothesis of a mitochondrial malfunction as the etiology for this neurologic disorder. Almost all examinations, including electron microscopy in search of structural mitochondrial abnormalities, gave normal results, the only exception being the not unexpected finding of slight neurogenic atrophy in the muscle biopsy specimen from a 15-year-old girl.

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The paper describes the sequence of events typical in the pathogenesis of germinal layer hemorrhage (GLH): An initial, often prenatal, severe asphyxic event, leading to abolishment of autoregulation of cerebral perfusion, and, most likely, to hypoxic-ischemic lesions in the endothelium of the large capillaries of the germinal matrix. The hypoxia is accompanied by exhaustion of myocardial energy reserves with circulatory failure, hypotension and aggravation of cerebral ischemia. In the period immediately after birth, circulation failure proceeds with cardiac insufficiency, hypotension, cerebral ischemia, and possibly venous hypertension.

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Low levels of pregnancy-associated plasma protein A (PAPPA) during the first trimester has been suggested as a biochemical indicator of pregnancies with aneuploid fetuses. Furthermore, the complete absence of PAPPA in pregnancies associated with Cornelia de Lange syndrome (CL) has suggested a causal connection between PAPPA and the development of CL. We have assigned the locus for PAPPA to chromosome region 9q33.

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Constitutional ring chromosomes and tumour suppressor genes.

J Med Genet

December 1992

Danish Centre for Human Genome Research, John F Kennedy Institute, Glostrup, Denmark.

The types of malignancy reported in carriers of constitutional ring chromosomes r(11), r(13), and r(22) are concordant with the chromosomal assignment of tumour suppressor loci associated with Wilms' tumour, retinoblastoma, and meningioma. It is suggested that the somatic instability of ring chromosomes may play a role in this association and that constitutional ring chromosomes may be a source for mapping of tumour suppressor loci with the potential for covering most or all of the human genome. The hypothesis predicts the presence of a locus on chromosome 10 associated with follicular carcinoma of the thyroid, in line with previous cytogenetic findings of rearrangements involving chromosome 10 in thyroid tumours, and a locus on chromosome 22 associated with testicular cancer.

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Menkes disease: an X-linked neurological disorder of the copper metabolism.

Brain Pathol

October 1992

Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics, John F. Kennedy Institute, Glostrup, Denmark.

Menkes disease is an X-linked, recessive disturbance of copper metabolism associated with a progressive clinical course and abnormal hair. The disease is dominated by neurological symptoms combined with connective tissue manifestations, most of which can be explained by the lack of important copper enzymes. Despite excessive accumulation of the metal in various tissues, a functional copper deficiency is evident, probably caused by a defective intracellular copper transport protein of unknown nature.

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Menkes disease, an X-linked recessive disorder of copper metabolism, has recently been mapped to Xq13.3 by two Menkes patients carrying chromosome rearrangements within this region. The breakpoints have been investigated by nonisotopic in situ suppression hybridization using YACs isolated from this region with the flanking markers DXS56 and PGK1.

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Nondisjunction in trisomy 21 has traditionally been studied by cytogenetic heteromorphisms. Those studies assumed no crossing-over on the short arm of chromosome 21. Recently, increased accuracy of detection of the origin of nondisjunction has been demonstrated by DNA polymorphism analysis.

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Nonphenylketonuria hyperphenylalaninemia (non-PKU HPA) is defined as phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) deficiency with blood phenylalanine levels below 600 mumol/liter (i.e., within the therapeutic range) on a normal dietary intake.

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Linkage analyses were performed in 11 families with X-linked Menkes disease. In each family more than one affected patient had been diagnosed. Forty informative meioses were tested using 11 polymorphic DNA markers.

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The concentration of neurotransmitter metabolites in the CSF was determined in 10 girls with the Rett syndrome (RS) (age range 5.8-17.2) and in 14 control children (age range 4.

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In 2 unrelated families 9 males presented with ataxia, apraxia, and neuropsychological abnormalities or mental deficiency, inherited as an X-linked recessive syndrome with partial clinical expression in obligate female carriers. The symptoms were present in early childhood and were non-progressive. Additional findings in 2 males were congenital "club-feet" and generalized seizures.

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