Mutations in the coding regions of TBX1 gene have been associated to 22q11 deletion syndrome with cardiac defects and isolated CHD cases, including ventricular septal defect (VSD).
This hypomorphic Tbx1 allele per se results in defects resembling 22q11DS but with a low penetrance of hallmark craniofacial malformations, unless chordin is mutant.
A study has also shown that phenotypic features of 22q11 deletion syndrome (22q11DS) were segregated with an inactivating mutation of TBX1 in one family, suggesting that the TBX1 gene plays a role in the pathogenesis of some psychiatric disorders.
Based on these results we conclude that TBX1 variation does not make a strong contribution to the genetic etiology of nonsyndromic forms of psychiatric disorders commonly seen in patients with 22q11DS.
A likely role for Tbx1 haploinsufficiency in psychiatric disease is further suggested by the identification of a family in which the phenotypic features of 22q11DS, including psychiatric disorders, segregate with an inactivating mutation of TBX1.
22q11 deletion syndrome (22qDS), also known as DiGeorge or velocardiofacial syndrome (DGS/VCFS), is a relatively common genetic anomaly that results in malformations of the heart, face and limbs.
Twenty children and young adults (age range 5 to 33 years, 12 females and eight males) with genetically confirmed 22q11 deletion syndrome (CATCH 22: Cardiac anomaly, Anomalous face, Thymus hypoplasia/aplasia, Cleft palate, and Hypocalcaemia), recruited from a large ongoing study, were given comprehensive assessments with a view to determining the pattern of neuropsychiatric and neuropsychological deficits thought to be part of the syndrome in many cases.
We studied whether a functional polymorphism in the COMT gene (Val(158) Met) influences striatal D(2/3) R binding ratios (D(2/3) R BP(ND) ) in 15 adults with 22q11 deletion syndrome and hemizygous for this gene, using single photon emission computed tomography and the selective D(2/3) radioligand [(123) I]IBZM.
Twelve adults with 22q11DS with schizophrenia (SCZ+) and 22 adults with 22q11DS without schizophrenia (SCZ-) were genotyped for the COMT Val¹⁰⁸/¹⁵⁸ Met genotype.
Additionally, the COMT gene maps to the commonly deleted region on chromosome 22q11 in 22q11 deletion syndrome (22q11DS), a disorder associated with a highly elevated risk for the development of psychosis.
We genotyped five polymorphisms at D22S941, D22S944, D22S264, and D22S311, and the COMT gene in the common 3Mbp deletion region associated with 22q11 deletion syndrome in 300 Japanese schizophrenics and 300 controls and identified one patient with 22q11 deletion (Arinami et al., 2001).
HIRA (histone cell cycle regulator) gene, as one of the candidate genes located at the critical region of 22q11DS, was reported as possibly relevant to CTD in animal models.
We used MLPA to estimate the size of the 22q11.2 deletions in 51 patients positive for TUPLE1 or N25 (FISH) testing, and to investigate 12 patients with clinical features suggestive of 22q11DS and negative FISH results.
UFD1L, a gene that is downregulated in dHAND-deficient mice, expressed in the mouse embryo at the branchial arch and mapped to human chromosome 22q11, has recently been strongly suspected to be responsible for the phenotypes expressed in 22q11 deletion syndromes.
The human UFD1L gene was deleted in all 182 patients studied with 22q11 deletion, and a smaller deletion of approximately 20 kilobases that removed exons 1 to 3 of UFD1L was found in one individual with features typical of 22q11 deletion syndrome.
The objective of this study was to determine how GPIBB hemizygosity and sequence variation relate to macrothrombocytopenia and bleeding in patients with 22q11DS who do not have Bernard-Soulier syndrome.
PRODH, encoding proline oxidase (POX), has been associated with schizophrenia through linkage, association, and the 22q11 deletion syndrome (Velo-Cardio-Facial syndrome).
Twenty children and young adults (age range 5 to 33 years, 12 females and eight males) with genetically confirmed 22q11 deletion syndrome (CATCH 22: Cardiac anomaly, Anomalous face, Thymus hypoplasia/aplasia, Cleft palate, and Hypocalcaemia), recruited from a large ongoing study, were given comprehensive assessments with a view to determining the pattern of neuropsychiatric and neuropsychological deficits thought to be part of the syndrome in many cases.
22q11 deletion syndrome (22qDS), also known as DiGeorge or velocardiofacial syndrome (DGS/VCFS), is a relatively common genetic anomaly that results in malformations of the heart, face and limbs.