Literature DB >> 7666392

A clinical and genetic study of campomelic dysplasia.

S Mansour1, C M Hall, M E Pembrey, I D Young.   

Abstract

Campomelic dysplasia (CMD) is a rare skeletal disorder that is usually lethal. It is characterised by bowing of the lower limbs, severe respiratory distress, and many of the chromosomal (XY) males show sex reversal. Because of a number of reports of familial campomelic dysplasia it is considered to be inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. In this study, details of 36 patients with campomelic dysplasia were collected from genetic centres, radiologists, and pathologists in the United Kingdom. The chromosomal sex ratio was approximately 1:1. There was a preponderance of phenotypic females owing to sex reversal. Three quarters of the chromosomal males were sex reversed or had ambiguous genitalia. Three cases are still alive, two with chromosomal rearrangements involving chromosome 17q. The majority of the others died in the neonatal period. The 36 index cases had 41 sibs of whom only two were affected. Formal segregation analysis gave a segregation ratio of 0.05 (95% CI approximately 0.00 to 0.11). This excludes an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance. The data suggest a sporadic, autosomal dominant mode of inheritance. Patients with a chromosomal rearrangement involving 17q (q23.3-q25.1) show a milder phenotype. The molecular mechanism for the difference is still unknown.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 7666392      PMCID: PMC1050480          DOI: 10.1136/jmg.32.6.415

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Genet        ISSN: 0022-2593            Impact factor:   6.318


  19 in total

1.  Heterogeneity in the campomelic syndromes: long and short bone varieties.

Authors:  A Khajavi; R S Lachman; D L Rimoin; R N Schimke; J P Dorst; A J Ebbin; S Handmaker; G Perreault
Journal:  Birth Defects Orig Artic Ser       Date:  1976

2.  Congenital bowing of the long bones in two sisters.

Authors:  A Stüve; H R Wiedemann
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  1971-08-28       Impact factor: 79.321

3.  Familial camptomelic dwarfism.

Authors:  T F Thurmon; E B DeFraites; E E Anderson
Journal:  J Pediatr       Date:  1973-11       Impact factor: 4.406

4.  Sex-reversed XY females with campomelic dysplasia are H-Y negative.

Authors:  F D Bricarelli; M Fraccaro; J Lindsten; U Müller; P Baggio; L D Carbone; A Hjerpe; F Lindgren; A Mayerová; H Ringertz; E M Ritzén; D C Rovetta; C Sicchero; U Wolf
Journal:  Hum Genet       Date:  1981       Impact factor: 4.132

5.  Campomelic dysplasia with sex reversal: morphological and cytogenetic studies of a case.

Authors:  C T Cooke; M T Mulcahy; G J Cullity; M Watson; P Srague
Journal:  Pathology       Date:  1985-07       Impact factor: 5.306

6.  Prenatal diagnosis of campomelic dwarfism.

Authors:  J P Fryns; K van den Berghe; A van Assche; H van den Berghe
Journal:  Clin Genet       Date:  1981-03       Impact factor: 4.438

7.  Campomelic dysplasia. Further elucidation of a distinct entity.

Authors:  B D Hall; J W Spranger
Journal:  Am J Dis Child       Date:  1980-03

8.  The camptomelic syndrome in two female siblings.

Authors:  H J Mellows; J Pryse-Davies; M J Bennett; C O Carter
Journal:  Clin Genet       Date:  1980-08       Impact factor: 4.438

Review 9.  The campomelic syndrome: review, report of 17 cases, and follow-up on the currently 17-year-old boy first reported by Maroteaux et al in 1971.

Authors:  C S Houston; J M Opitz; J W Spranger; R I Macpherson; M H Reed; E F Gilbert; J Herrmann; A Schinzel
Journal:  Am J Med Genet       Date:  1983-05

10.  Prenatal diagnosis of campomelic dysplasia by ultrasonography.

Authors:  R Winter; W Rosenkranz; H Hofmann; H Zierler; H Becker; M Borkenstein
Journal:  Prenat Diagn       Date:  1985 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 3.050

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  55 in total

1.  Campomelic dysplasia translocation breakpoints are scattered over 1 Mb proximal to SOX9: evidence for an extended control region.

Authors:  D Pfeifer; R Kist; K Dewar; K Devon; E S Lander; B Birren; L Korniszewski; E Back; G Scherer
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  1999-07       Impact factor: 11.025

2.  The new collagen gene COL27A1 contains SOX9-responsive enhancer elements.

Authors:  Elizabeth Jenkins; Jennie B Moss; James M Pace; Laura C Bridgewater
Journal:  Matrix Biol       Date:  2005-04-22       Impact factor: 11.583

3.  Chromosome conformation capture-on-chip analysis of long-range cis-interactions of the SOX9 promoter.

Authors:  Marta Smyk; Przemyslaw Szafranski; Michał Startek; Anna Gambin; Paweł Stankiewicz
Journal:  Chromosome Res       Date:  2013-11-20       Impact factor: 5.239

4.  Sox9 plays multiple roles in the lung epithelium during branching morphogenesis.

Authors:  Briana E Rockich; Steven M Hrycaj; Hung Ping Shih; Melinda S Nagy; Michael A H Ferguson; Janel L Kopp; Maike Sander; Deneen M Wellik; Jason R Spence
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2013-11-04       Impact factor: 11.205

5.  Fine mapping of chromosome 17 translocation breakpoints > or = 900 Kb upstream of SOX9 in acampomelic campomelic dysplasia and a mild, familial skeletal dysplasia.

Authors:  Katherine L Hill-Harfe; Lee Kaplan; Heather J Stalker; Roberto T Zori; Ramona Pop; Gerd Scherer; Margaret R Wallace
Journal:  Am J Hum Genet       Date:  2005-04       Impact factor: 11.025

Review 6.  Skeletal dysplasias.

Authors:  Deborah Krakow
Journal:  Clin Perinatol       Date:  2015-04-08       Impact factor: 3.430

Review 7.  Genetics and signaling mechanisms of orofacial clefts.

Authors:  Kurt Reynolds; Shuwen Zhang; Bo Sun; Michael A Garland; Yu Ji; Chengji J Zhou
Journal:  Birth Defects Res       Date:  2020-07-15       Impact factor: 2.344

8.  SOX9 chromatin folding domains correlate with its real and putative distant cis-regulatory elements.

Authors:  Marta Smyk; Kadir Caner Akdemir; Paweł Stankiewicz
Journal:  Nucleus       Date:  2017-01-13       Impact factor: 4.197

9.  Absent pedicles in campomelic dysplasia.

Authors:  Michael M McDowell; Ozgur Dede; Patrick Bosch; Elizabeth C Tyler-Kabara
Journal:  Childs Nerv Syst       Date:  2017-04-26       Impact factor: 1.475

10.  Deletion of long-range regulatory elements upstream of SOX9 causes campomelic dysplasia.

Authors:  V M Wunderle; R Critcher; N Hastie; P N Goodfellow; A Schedl
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1998-09-01       Impact factor: 11.205

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