Literature DB >> 12503120

Defects of blastogenesis.

John M Opitz1, Ginevra Zanni, James F Reynolds, Enid Gilbert-Barness.   

Abstract

Ever more frequent and closer involvement by clinical geneticists and counselors in the prenatal assessment of development mandates a better understanding of all stages of human ontogeny, but especially those of earliest development during which most of the lethal and all of the gross, multiple and complex defects of morphogenesis arise. Because of the phenomenon of universality, i.e., identical molecular inductive mechanisms involved in the process of embryonic pattern formation in all vertebrates, experimental animals indeed are a most valuable approach to an understanding of the causal and formal aspects of development and are beginning to forge essential, strong bonds between molecular biologists and clinicians in a mutually supportive discipline of developmental biology. However, to grieving parents of a stillborn fetus with, say, Pentalogy of Cantrell, sirenomelia or otocephaly, mouse data offer little comfort or reassurance about recurrence; thus, it is imperative to make ever more effective a science of human teratology (sensu lato) with participating reproductive geneticists, obstetricians, neonatologists, ultrasonographers, pediatric/fetal pathologists, cytogeneticists and pediatric geneticists to generate the diagnostic, pathogenetic and causal data necessary to counsel and to comfort the parents. Few molecular data exist on causes of blastogenetic defects in humans; however, the phenomenon of parsimony, whereby the same "morphogenetic" molecule, say, sonic hedgehog (SHH), is "deployed" simultaneously or sequentially during the morphogenesis (and even the histogenesis) of several/many embryonic primordia, makes it likely that a genetic/epigenetic disturbance of such an inductive system will have multiple effects on blastogenetic, organogenetic and perhaps also histogenetic events in the embryo. If causally defined, such a pattern of anomalies constitutes pleiotropy, and the embryo/fetus can be said to have a syndrome. If cause is unknown, the presumption of pleiotropy is less certain, and the fetus/infant may be said to have an "association" with low empiric recurrence risk. Copyright 2002 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 12503120     DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.10983

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Med Genet        ISSN: 0148-7299


  21 in total

Review 1.  Sirenomelia: an epidemiologic study in a large dataset from the International Clearinghouse of Birth Defects Surveillance and Research, and literature review.

Authors:  Iêda M Orioli; Emmanuelle Amar; Jazmin Arteaga-Vazquez; Marian K Bakker; Sebastiano Bianca; Lorenzo D Botto; Maurizio Clementi; Adolfo Correa; Melinda Csaky-Szunyogh; Emanuele Leoncini; Zhu Li; Jorge S López-Camelo; R Brian Lowry; Lisa Marengo; María-Luisa Martínez-Frías; Pierpaolo Mastroiacovo; Margery Morgan; Anna Pierini; Annukka Ritvanen; Gioacchino Scarano; Elena Szabova; Eduardo E Castilla
Journal:  Am J Med Genet C Semin Med Genet       Date:  2011-10-14       Impact factor: 3.908

2.  Multiple malformations: a possible Sonic hedgehog phenotype?

Authors:  Helen Wainwright; Peter Beighton
Journal:  Virchows Arch       Date:  2009-02-10       Impact factor: 4.064

3.  Lethal epiphyseal stippling in the foetus and neonate; pathological implications.

Authors:  Helen Wainwright; Peter Beighton
Journal:  Virchows Arch       Date:  2010-03       Impact factor: 4.064

4.  Diabetic embryopathy: a developmental perspective from fertilization to adulthood.

Authors:  M Castori
Journal:  Mol Syndromol       Date:  2013-02

5.  Surveillance survey of family history in children with neural tube defects.

Authors:  Esther B Dupépé; Daxa M Patel; Brandon G Rocque; Betsy Hopson; Anastasia A Arynchyna; E Ralee' Bishop; Jeffrey P Blount
Journal:  J Neurosurg Pediatr       Date:  2017-03-31       Impact factor: 2.375

Review 6.  An epigenetic association of malformations, adverse reproductive outcomes, and fetal origins hypothesis related effects.

Authors:  Mark Lubinsky
Journal:  J Assist Reprod Genet       Date:  2018-05-09       Impact factor: 3.412

7.  Craniorachischisis and omphalocele in a stillborn cynomolgus monkey (Macaca fascicularis).

Authors:  Charleen M Moore; Edward J Dick; Gene B Hubbard; Stephanie M Gardner; Betty G Dunn; Arthur R Brothman; Vick Williams; Suresh I Prajapati; Charles Keller; Michael D Davis
Journal:  Am J Med Genet A       Date:  2011-05-12       Impact factor: 2.802

8.  Perosomus elumbis in a stillborn rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta): A case report.

Authors:  Tara Patrick; Olga Gonzalez; Edward J Dick; Shyamesh Kumar
Journal:  J Med Primatol       Date:  2020-01-07       Impact factor: 0.667

9.  Beyond Gómez-López-Hernández syndrome: recurring phenotypic themes in rhombencephalosynapsis.

Authors:  Hannah M Tully; Jennifer C Dempsey; Gisele E Ishak; Margaret P Adam; Cynthia J R Curry; Pedro Sanchez-Lara; Alasdair Hunter; Karen W Gripp; Judith Allanson; Christopher Cunniff; Ian Glass; Kathleen J Millen; Daniel Doherty; William B Dobyns
Journal:  Am J Med Genet A       Date:  2012-09-10       Impact factor: 2.802

10.  Sirenomelia phenotype in bmp7;shh compound mutants: a novel experimental model for studies of caudal body malformations.

Authors:  Carlos Garrido-Allepuz; Domingo González-Lamuño; Maria A Ros
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-09-17       Impact factor: 3.240

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.