942 resultados para Chromosome Disorders


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A large body of published work shows that proton (hydrogen 1 [(1)H]) magnetic resonance (MR) spectroscopy has evolved from a research tool into a clinical neuroimaging modality. Herein, the authors present a summary of brain disorders in which MR spectroscopy has an impact on patient management, together with a critical consideration of common data acquisition and processing procedures. The article documents the impact of (1)H MR spectroscopy in the clinical evaluation of disorders of the central nervous system. The clinical usefulness of (1)H MR spectroscopy has been established for brain neoplasms, neonatal and pediatric disorders (hypoxia-ischemia, inherited metabolic diseases, and traumatic brain injury), demyelinating disorders, and infectious brain lesions. The growing list of disorders for which (1)H MR spectroscopy may contribute to patient management extends to neurodegenerative diseases, epilepsy, and stroke. To facilitate expanded clinical acceptance and standardization of MR spectroscopy methodology, guidelines are provided for data acquisition and analysis, quality assessment, and interpretation. Finally, the authors offer recommendations to expedite the use of robust MR spectroscopy methodology in the clinical setting, including incorporation of technical advances on clinical units. © RSNA, 2014 Online supplemental material is available for this article.

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Using one male-inherited and eight biparentally inherited microsatellite markers, we investigate the population genetic structure of the Valais chromosome race of the common shrew (Sorex araneus) in the Central Alps of Europe. Unexpectedly, the Y-chromosome microsatellite suggests nearly complete absence of male gene flow among populations from the St-Bernard and Simplon regions (Switzerland). Autosomal markers also show significant genetic structuring among these two geographical areas. Isolation by distance is significant and possible barriers to gene flow exist in the study area. Two different approaches are used to better understand the geographical patterns and the causes of this structuring. Using a principal component analysis for which testing procedure exists, and partial Mantel tests, we show that the St-Bernard pass does not represent a significant barrier to gene flow although it culminates at 2469 m, close to the highest altitudinal record for this species. Similar results are found for the Simplon pass, indicating that both passes represented potential postglacial recolonization routes into Switzerland from Italian refugia after the last Pleistocene glaciations. In contrast with the weak effect of these mountain passes, the Rhône valley lowlands significantly reduce gene flow in this species. Natural obstacles (the large Rhône river) and unsuitable habitats (dry slopes) are both present in the valley. Moreover, anthropogenic changes to landscape structures are likely to have strongly reduced available habitats for this shrew in the lowlands, thereby promoting genetic differentiation of populations found on opposite sides of the Rhône valley.

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Summary Mood disorders are among the most prevalent, psychosocial^ debilitating, chronic and relapsing forms of psychiatric illnesses. Despite considerable advances in their characterization, the heterogeneous nature of susceptibility factors and patient's symptoms could account for the lack of totally effective and remissive treatment. The neurobiological hypothesis of mood disorders etiology has evolved since the monoamine and neurotrophin theories and current evidence is pointing toward their integration in a broader polygenic epistatic model resulting in defective neuroplasticity of circuitries involved in emotion processing. Consequently, the unraveling of molecular underpinning pathways involved in neuronal plasticity, commonly altered among mood disorder syndromes and symptoms, should shed light on their etiology and provide new drug target. The transcription factor CREB has been critically involved in the long-lasting forms of neuronal plasticity and in the regulation of several mood disorders susceptibility genes. In addition, altered CREB activity has been associated with mood disorders pathophysiology and pharmacotherapy. Interestingly, the newly-identified protein CREB-regulated transcription coactivator 1 (CRTC1) was shown by previous studies in the laboratory to be a neuroactivity- dependent cAMP and calcium sensor, a potent activator of CREB-dependent transcription and involved in neuroplasticity mechanisms associated with long-term synaptic potentiation. Furthermore, the major mood disorder susceptibility gene Bdnf was suggested to be transcriptional regulated by CRTC1. Therefore, we aimed to investigate a role for CRTC1 in mood disorders by generating and characterizing a Crtcl deficient mouse model at the behavioral and molecular levels. Interestingly, their comprehensive characterization revealed a behavioral profile mirroring several major symptoms comorbid in mood disorders, including altered social interactions, aggressive behaviors, obesity, psychomotor retardation, increased emotional response to stress, decreased sexual drive and depression-like behaviors. To investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying these pathological behaviors and the implication of CRTC1 in the regulation of CREB-regulated genes in vivo, we also quantified transcript levels of several relevant CREB-regulated susceptibility genes in brain structures involved in the pathophysiology of mood disorders. Strikingly, we found the underexpression of primary components of the neurotrophin system: Bdnf and its cognate receptor TrkB, a marked decrease in the Nr4a family of transcription factors, implicated in neuroplasticity and associated with dopamine-related disorders, as well as in several other relevant CREB regulated genes. Moreover, neurochemical analysis revealed that Crtcl null mice presented alteration in prefrontal cortical monoamine turnover as well as in hippocampal and accumbal serotonin levels, similarly associated with mood disorders etiology and pharmacotherapy. Together, the present thesis supports the involvement of CRTC1 pathway hypofunction in the pathogenesis of mood disorders and specifically in pathological aggression, obesity and depression-related behavior comorbidities. Ultimately, CRTC1 may represent an interesting antidepressant, antiaggressive or mood stabilizer drug target candidate through the modulation of major CREB regulated susceptibility genes. Les troubles de l'humeur comptent parmi les maladies psychiatriques les plus prévalentes, psychosocialement débilitantes, chroniques et avec le plus grand risque de rechute. Malgré de considérable avancées dans leur caractérisation, la nature hétérogène des facteurs de susceptibilité et des symptômes présentés par les patients, semble justifier l'absence de traitement entraînant une rémission complète de la maladie. L'hypothèse de l'étiologie neurobiologique des troubles de l'humeur a évolué depuis la théorie des monoamines et des neurotrophines. Actuellement, elle tend à les englober dans un modèle polygénique épistatique induisant une déficience de la neuroplasticité des circuits impliqué dans la régulation des émotions. Par conséquent, il apparaît particulièrement relevant de caractériser des voies moléculaires impliquées dans la plasticité neuronale, communément altérées parmi les différents syndromes et symptômes des maladies de l'humeur, afin d'améliorer leur compréhension ainsi que de proposer de nouvelles cibles thérapeutiques potentielles. Le facteur de transcription CREB a été de façon répétée et cohérente impliqué dans les mécanismes à long terme de la plasticité neuronale, ainsi que dans la régulation de plusieurs gènes de susceptibilité aux maladies de l'humeur. De plus, une altération dans l'activité de CREB a été impliqué dans leur étiologie et pharmacothérapie. De façon intéressante, des résultats préliminaires sur la protéine récemment découverte CREB-regulated transcription coactivator 1 (CRTC1) ont indiqué que son activation était dépendante de l'activité neuronale, qu'il était un senseur du calcium et de l'AMPc, ainsi qu'un coactivateur de CREB requis et puissant impliqué dans les mécanismes de plasticité neuronale associés à la potentialisation à long terme. En outre, des résultats ont suggéré que le gène majeur de susceptibilité Bdnf est régulé par CRTC1. Ainsi, notre objectif a été d'investiguer un rôle éventuel de CRTC1 dans les maladies de l'humeur en générant et caractérisant une lignée de souris déficiente pour Crtcl, tant au niveau comportemental que moléculaire. De façon intéressante, leur caractérisation détaillée a révélé un profil comportemental reflétant de nombreux aspects des maladies de l'humeur incluant une altération des interactions sociales, une agression pathologique, l'obésité, un retard psychomoteur, une réponse émotionnelle au stress accrue, une diminution de la motivation sexuelle, et des comportements reliés à la dépression. Afin d'investiguer les mécanismes moléculaires sous- jacents cette altération du comportement, ainsi que l'implication de CRTC1 dans l'expression des gènes régulés par CREB in vivo, nous avons quantifié les niveaux de transcrits de plusieurs gènes de susceptibilité régulés par CREB et impliqués dans la physiopathologie des maladies de l'humeur. Remarquablement, nous avons trouvé la sous-expression de composants primordiaux du système neurotrophique: Bdnf et son récepteur TrkB, une diminution majeure de la famille des facteurs de transcription Nr4a, impliqués dans la neuroplasticité et associés à des désordres liés à la dopamine, ainsi que de nombreux autres gènes relevants régulés par CREB. De plus, une analyse neurochimique a révélé que les souris déficientes pour Crtcî présentent une altération du turn-over des monoamines du cortex préfrontal ainsi que des niveaux hippocampaux et accumbaux de sérotonine, associés de façon similaire dans l'étiologie et la pharmacothérapie des maladies de l'humeur. Vue dans son ensemble, la présente thèse supporte l'implication d'une sous-régulation de la voie de CRTCI dans la pathogenèse des maladies de l'humeur ainsi que dans la comorbidité de l'agression pathologique, l'obésité et la dépression. En conclusion, CRTCI pourrait représenter une cible médicamenteuse intéressante aux propriétés antidépressante, antiagressive ou stabilisatrice de l'humeur au travers de la modulation de gènes de susceptibilité majeurs régulés par CREB.

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Cancer/testis (CT) genes are normally expressed in germ cells only, yet are reactivated and expressed in some tumors. Of the approximately 40 CT genes or gene families identified to date, 20 are on the X chromosome and are present as multigene families, many with highly conserved members. This indicates that novel CT gene families may be identified by detecting duplicated expressed genes on chromosome X. By searching for transcript clusters that map to multiple locations on the chromosome, followed by in silico analysis of their gene expression profiles, we identified five novel gene families with testis-specific expression and >98% sequence identity among family members. The expression of these genes in normal tissues and various tumor cell lines and specimens was evaluated by qualitative and quantitative RT-PCR, and a novel CT gene family with at least 13 copies was identified on Xq24, designated as CT47. mRNA expression of CT47 was found mainly in the testes, with weak expression in the placenta. Brain tissue was the only positive somatic tissue tested, with an estimated CT47 transcript level 0.09% of that found in testis. Among the tumor specimens tested, CT47 expression was found in approximately 15% of lung cancer and esophageal cancer specimens, but not in colorectal cancer or breast cancer. The putative CT47 protein consists of 288 amino acid residues, with a C-terminus rich in alanine and glutamic acid. The only species other than human in which a gene homologous to CT47 has been detected is the chimpanzee, with the predicted protein showing approximately 80% identity in its carboxy terminal region.

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Infantile spasms (IS) is the most severe and common form of epilepsy occurring in the first year of life. At least half of IS cases are idiopathic in origin, with others presumed to arise because of brain insult or malformation. Here, we identify a locus for IS by high-resolution mapping of 7q11.23-q21.1 interstitial deletions in patients. The breakpoints delineate a 500 kb interval within the MAGI2 gene (1.4 Mb in size) that is hemizygously disrupted in 15 of 16 participants with IS or childhood epilepsy, but remains intact in 11 of 12 participants with no seizure history. MAGI2 encodes the synaptic scaffolding protein membrane-associated guanylate kinase inverted-2 that interacts with Stargazin, a protein also associated with epilepsy in the stargazer mouse.

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Clinical experience suggests that longstanding personality characteristics as a person's most distinctive features of all are likely to play a role in how someone with dementia copes with his increasing deficiencies. Personality characteristics may have a pathoplastic effect on both behavioral and psychological symptoms (BPS) or on cognition as well as cognitive decline. Cognitive disorders accompanied by BPS are a tremendous burden for both the patient and their proxies. This review suggests that premorbid personality characteristics are co-determinants of BPS in cognitive disorders, but much effort is needed to clarify whether or not specific premorbid personality traits are associated with specific BPS as no strong links have so far emerged. This review further shows that a growing field of research is interested in the links not only between quite short-lived emotional states and cognitive processes, but also between longstanding personality traits and cognition in both healthy individuals and patients with neurodegenerative disorders. Furthermore, a few studies found that specific premorbid personality traits may be risk factors for neurodegenerative diseases. However, research findings in this area remain scarce despite a huge literature on personality and cognitive disorders in general. An important shortcoming that hampers so far the progress of our understanding in these domains is the confusion in the literature between longstanding premorbid personality traits and transient personality changes observed in neurodegenerative diseases. Few studies have based their assessments on accepted personality theories and carefully investigated premorbid personality traits in patients with cognitive disorders, although assessing personality may be complicated in these patients. Studying the impact of personality characteristics in cognitive disorders is an especially promising field of research in particular when concomitantly using neurobiological approaches, in particular structural brain imaging and genetic studies as suggested by as yet rare studies. Improved understanding of premorbid personality characteristics as determinants of both BPS or cognitive capacities or decline is likely to influence our attitudes towards the treatment of demented patients and ultimately to help in alleviating a patient's and their proxies' burden.

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Primary cutaneous posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorders (PTLD) are rare. This retrospective, multicenter study of 35 cases aimed to better describe this entity. Cases were (re)-classified according to the WHO-EORTC or the WHO 2008 classifications of lymphomas. Median interval between first transplantation and diagnosis was 85 months. Fifty-seven percent of patients had a kidney transplant. Twenty-four cases (68.6%) were classified as primary cutaneous T cell lymphoma (CTCL) and 11 (31.4%) as primary cutaneous B cell PTLD. Mycosis fungoides (MF) was the most common (50%) CTCL subtype. Ten (90.9%) cutaneous B cell PTLD cases were classified as EBV-associated B cell lymphoproliferations (including one plasmablastic lymphoma and one lymphomatoid granulomatosis) and one as diffuse large B cell lymphoma, other, that was EBV-negative. Sixteen (45.7%) patients died after a median follow-up of 19.5 months (11 [68.8%] with CTCL [6 of whom had CD30(+) lymphoproliferative disorders (LPD)] and 5 [31.2%] with cutaneous B cell PTLD. Median survival times for all patients, CTCL and cutaneous B cell PTLD subgroups were 93, 93, and 112 months, respectively. Survival rates for MF were higher than those for CD30(+) LPD. The spectrum of primary CTCL in organ transplant recipients (OTR) is similar to that in the general population. The prognosis of posttransplant primary cutaneous CD30(+) LPD is worse than posttransplant MF and than its counterpart in the immunocompetent population. EBV-associated cutaneous B cell LPD predominates in OTR.

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A total of 357 house mice (Mus domesticus) from 83 localities uniformly distributed throughout Switzerland were screened for the presence of a homogenously staining region (HSR) on chromosome 1. Altogether 47 mice from 11 localities were HSR/+ or HSR/HSR. One sample of 11 individuals all had an HSR/HSR karyotype. Almost all mice with the variant were collected from the Rhone valley (HSR frequency: 61%) and Val Bregaglia (HSR frequency: 81%). For samples from most of the area of Switzerland, the HSR was absent. There was no strong association between the geographic distribution of the HSR and the areas of occurrence of metacentrics. However, at Chiggiogna the HSR was found on Rb (1.3). Possible explanations for the HSR polymorphism are discussed.

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Mental disorders (depression, anxiety and somatization) are frequent in Primary care and are often associated to physical complaints and to psychosocial stressors. Mental disorders have in this way a specific presentation and in addition patients may present different associations of them. Sometimes it is difficult to recognize them, but it is important to do so and to take rapidly care of these patients. Specific screening questions exist and have been used in a research of the Institute of General Medicine and the Department of Ambulatory Care and Community Medicine (PMU), University of Lausanne, Switzerland.

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Aims: To provide 12-month prevalence and disability burden estimates of a broad range of mental and neurological disorders in the European Union (EU) and to compare these findings to previous estimates. Referring to our previous 2005 review, improved up-to-date data for the enlarged EU on a broader range of disorders than previously covered are needed for basic, clinical and public health research and policy decisions and to inform about the estimated number of persons affected in the EU. Method: Stepwise multi-method approach, consisting of systematic literature reviews, reanalyses of existing data sets, national surveys and expert consultations. Studies and data from all member states of the European Union (EU-27) plus Switzerland, Iceland and Norway were included. Supplementary information about neurological disorders is provided, although methodological constraints prohibited the derivation of overall prevalence estimates for mental and neurological disorders. Disease burden was measured by disability adjusted life years (DALY). Results: Prevalence: It is estimated that each year 38.2% of the EU population suffers from a mental disorder. Adjusted for age and comorbidity, this corresponds to 164.8 million persons affected. Compared to 2005 (27.4%) this higher estimate is entirely due to the inclusion of 14 new disorders also covering childhood/adolescence as well as the elderly. The estimated higher number of persons affected (2011: 165 m vs. 2005: 82 m) is due to coverage of childhood and old age populations, new disorders and of new EU membership states. The most frequent disorders are anxiety disorders (14.0%), insomnia (7.0%), major depression (6.9%), somatoform (6.3%), alcohol and drug dependence (>4%), ADHD (5%) in the young, and dementia (1-30%, depending on age). Except for substance use disorders and mental retardation, there were no substantial cultural or country variations. Although many sources, including national health insurance programs, reveal increases in sick leave, early retirement and treatment rates due to mental disorders, rates in the community have not increased with a few exceptions (i.e. dementia). There were also no consistent indications of improvements with regard to low treatment rates, delayed treatment provision and grossly inadequate treatment. Disability: Disorders of the brain and mental disorders in particular, contribute 26.6% of the total all cause burden, thus a greater proportion as compared to other regions of the world. The rank order of the most disabling diseases differs markedly by gender and age group; overall, the four most disabling single conditions were: depression, dementias, alcohol use disorders and stroke. Conclusion: In every year over a third of the total EU population suffers from mental disorders. The true size of "disorders of the brain" including neurological disorders is even considerably larger. Disorders of the brain are the largest contributor to the all cause morbidity burden as measured by DALY in the EU. No indications for increasing overall rates of mental disorders were found nor of improved care and treatment since 2005; less than one third of all cases receive any treatment, suggesting a considerable level of unmet needs. We conclude that the true size and burden of disorders of the brain in the EU was significantly underestimated in the past.Concerted priority action is needed at all levels, including substantially increased funding for basic, clinical and public health research in order to identify better strategies for improved prevention and treatment for isorders of the brain as the core health challenge of the 21st century. (C) 2011 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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OBJECTIVE: Studies of major depression in twins and families have shown moderate to high heritability, but extensive molecular studies have failed to identify susceptibility genes convincingly. To detect genetic variants contributing to major depression, the authors performed a genome-wide association study using 1,636 cases of depression ascertained in the U.K. and 1,594 comparison subjects screened negative for psychiatric disorders. METHOD: Cases were collected from 1) a case-control study of recurrent depression (the Depression Case Control [DeCC] study; N=1346), 2) an affected sibling pair linkage study of recurrent depression (probands from the Depression Network [DeNT] study; N=332), and 3) a pharmacogenetic study (the Genome-Based Therapeutic Drugs for Depression [GENDEP] study; N=88). Depression cases and comparison subjects were genotyped at Centre National de Génotypage on the Illumina Human610-Quad BeadChip. After applying stringent quality control criteria for missing genotypes, departure from Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium, and low minor allele frequency, the authors tested for association to depression using logistic regression, correcting for population ancestry. RESULTS: Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in BICC1 achieved suggestive evidence for association, which strengthened after imputation of ungenotyped markers, and in analysis of female depression cases. A meta-analysis of U.K. data with previously published results from studies in Munich and Lausanne showed some evidence for association near neuroligin 1 (NLGN1) on chromosome 3, but did not support findings at BICC1. CONCLUSIONS: This study identifies several signals for association worthy of further investigation but, as in previous genome-wide studies, suggests that individual gene contributions to depression are likely to have only minor effects, and very large pooled analyses will be required to identify them.

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PURPOSE: To identify the genetic defect for the Coppock-like cataract (CCL) affecting a Swiss family, which defect was unlinked to the chromosome 2q33-35 CCL locus. METHODS: A large family was characterized for linkage analysis by slit lamp examination or by the review of drawings made before cataract extraction. The affection status was attributed before genotyping, and the genotyping was masked to the affection status. Two-point and multipoint linkage analyses were performed using the MLINK and the LINKMAP components of the LINKAGE program package (ver. 5.1), respectively. Mutational analysis of candidate genes was performed by a combination of direct cycle sequencing and an amplification refractory mutation system assay. RESULTS: Ten individuals were affected with the CCL phenotype. The disease was autosomal dominant and appeared to be fully penetrant. A new CCL locus was identified on chromosome 22q11.2 within a 11.67-cM interval (maximum lod score [Zmax] = 4.14; theta = 0). Mutational analysis of the CRYBB2 candidate gene identified a disease-causing mutation in exon 6. This sequence change was identical with that previously described to be associated with the cerulean cataract, a clinically distinct entity. CONCLUSIONS: The CCL phenotype is genetically heterogeneous with a second gene on chromosome 22q11.2, CRYBB2. The CCL and the cerulean cataract are two distinct clinical entities associated with the same genetic defect. This work provides evidence for a modifier factor that influences cataract formation and that remains to be identified.

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Therapeutic strategies for essential tremor (ET) and Parkinson's disease (PD) can be divided into two successive steps, one based on oral medications and the other, more invasive, using pumps or functional neurosurgery. When ET becomes refractory to propranolol, primidone and other, second-choice compounds, deep brain stimulation of the VIM nucleus of the thalamus can be considered. When PD becomes resistant to dopamine replacement therapy using various combinations of dopaminergic agents, then three options can be discussed: first, a subcutaneous apomorphine mini-pump, second, a jejunal levodopa-delivery system by means of percutaneous gastrostomy, and third, bilateral deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus. The above interventions are successful in about 80% of cases.