Literature DB >> 3740099

SC phocomelia syndrome, premature centromere separation, and congenital cranial nerve paralysis in two sisters, one with malignant melanoma.

D M Parry, J J Mulvihill, S E Tsai, M I Kaiser-Kupfer, J M Cowan.   

Abstract

Two middle age sisters had most manifestations of the SC phocomelia syndrome including postnatal growth retardation, symmetric limb deficiencies with radial aplasia and absent thumbs, facial anomalies with microcephaly, microphthalmia, hypoplastic nasal alae, and borderline to mild mental retardation. Unusual findings included congenital paralysis of some cranial nerves in both patients and malignant melanoma in the proposita. Cultured lymphocytes from both patients, and skin fibroblasts, Epstein Barr virus-transformed lymphocytes, and tumor cells from the proposita demonstrated premature separation of centromeric heterochromatin (PCS) of many chromosomes, a finding noted previously in the SC phocomelia syndrome and the similar but more severe Roberts syndrome. Extensive overlap of the phenotypes of the sisters and 15 other patients with either syndrome and PCS confirms that these are either allelic conditions or the same disease--designated Roberts-SC phocomelia syndrome. The role of PCS in the syndrome(s) remains uncertain since some patients with the characteristic clinical phenotypes are reported to lack it.

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Year:  1986        PMID: 3740099     DOI: 10.1002/ajmg.1320240410

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


  13 in total

1.  Mitotic disturbance associated with mosaic aneuploidies.

Authors:  K Miller; W Müller; L Winkler; M R Hadam; J H Ehrich; S D Flatz
Journal:  Hum Genet       Date:  1990-03       Impact factor: 4.132

2.  The Baller-Gerold syndrome: phenotypic and cytogenetic overlap with Roberts syndrome.

Authors:  S M Huson; C S Rodgers; C M Hall; R M Winter
Journal:  J Med Genet       Date:  1990-06       Impact factor: 6.318

3.  Studies of mitotic and centromeric abnormalities in Roberts syndrome: implications for a defect in the mitotic mechanism.

Authors:  E W Jabs; C M Tuck-Muller; R Cusano; J B Rattner
Journal:  Chromosoma       Date:  1991-05       Impact factor: 4.316

Review 4.  C-anaphases in lymphocyte cultures versus premature centromere division syndromes.

Authors:  Y Chamla
Journal:  Hum Genet       Date:  1988-02       Impact factor: 4.132

5.  Further delineation of the Yunis-Varon syndrome.

Authors:  R C Hennekam; C Vermeulen-Meiners
Journal:  J Med Genet       Date:  1989-01       Impact factor: 6.318

6.  Long-term survival after corrective surgeries in two patients with severe deformities due to Roberts syndrome: A Case report and review of the literature.

Authors:  Jing Zhou; Xiaonan Yang; Xiaolei Jin; Zhenhua Jia; Haibin Lu; Zuoliang Qi
Journal:  Exp Ther Med       Date:  2017-12-05       Impact factor: 2.447

7.  Inactivating mutations in ESCO2 cause SC phocomelia and Roberts syndrome: no phenotype-genotype correlation.

Authors:  Birgitt Schüle; Angelica Oviedo; Kathreen Johnston; Shashidhar Pai; Uta Francke
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2005-10-31       Impact factor: 11.025

8.  Chromatid repulsion associated with Roberts/SC phocomelia syndrome is reduced in malignant cells and not expressed in interspecies somatic-cell hybrids.

Authors:  N E Krassikoff; J M Cowan; D M Parry; U Francke
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  1986-11       Impact factor: 11.025

9.  Roberts-SC syndrome, a rare syndrome and cleft palate repair.

Authors:  Jyotsna Murthy; Madhu Dewan; Altaf Hussain
Journal:  Indian J Plast Surg       Date:  2008-07

10.  Report of the Phenotype of a Patient with Roberts Syndrome and a Rare ESCO2 Variant.

Authors:  Carla Bastos da Costa Almeida; Amanda Thum Welter; Gabriel Dotta Abech; Gabriela Rangel Brandão; José Antônio Monteiro Flores; Birgitt Schüle; Uta Francke; Marilu Fiegenbaum; Paulo Ricardo Gazzola Zen; Rafael Fabiano Machado Rosa
Journal:  J Pediatr Genet       Date:  2019-09-03
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