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A progressive syndrome of autism, dementia, ataxia, and loss of purposeful hand use in girls: Rett's syndrome: report of 35 cases.

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TLDR
The exclusive involvement of females, correlated with findings in family data analyses, suggests a dominant mutation on one X chromosome that results in affected girls and nonviable male hemizygous conceptuses.
Abstract
Thirty-five patients, exclusively girls, from three countries had a uniform and striking progressive encephalopathy. After normal general and psychomotor development up to the age of 7 to 18 months, developmental stagnation occurred, followed by rapid deterioration of higher brain functions. Within one-and-a-half years this deterioration led to severe dementia, autism, loss of purposeful use of the hands, jerky truncal ataxia, and acquired microcephaly. The destructive stage was followed by apparent stability lasting through decades. Additional insidious neurological abnormalities supervened, mainly spastic parapareses, vasomotor disturbances of the lower limbs, and epilepsy. Prior extensive laboratory investigations have not revealed the cause. The condition is similar to a virtually overlooked syndrome described by Rett in the German literature. The exclusive involvement of females, correlated with findings in family data analyses, suggests a dominant mutation on one X chromosome that results in affected girls and nonviable male hemizygous conceptuses.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised: a revised version of a diagnostic interview for caregivers of individuals with possible pervasive developmental disorders

TL;DR: The revised interview has been reorganized, shortened, modified to be appropriate for children with mental ages from about 18 months into adulthood and linked to ICD-10 and DSM-IV criteria.
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Rett syndrome is caused by mutations in X-linked MECP2, encoding methyl-CpG-binding protein 2.

TL;DR: This study reports the first disease-causing mutations in RTT and points to abnormal epigenetic regulation as the mechanism underlying the pathogenesis of RTT.
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A mouse Mecp2-null mutation causes neurological symptoms that mimic rett syndrome

TL;DR: The overlapping delay before symptom onset in humans and mice raises the possibility that stability of brain function, not brain development per se, is compromised by the absence of MeCP2, and generates mice lacking Mecp2 using Cre-loxP technology.
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Deficiency of methyl-CpG binding protein-2 in CNS neurons results in a Rett-like phenotype in mice

TL;DR: The results indicate that the role of MECp2 is not restricted to the immature brain, but becomes critical in mature neurons, and that Mecp2 deficiency in these neurons is sufficient to cause neuronal dysfunction with symptomatic manifestation similar to Rett syndrome.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Story of Rett Syndrome: From Clinic to Neurobiology

TL;DR: To investigate the potential for restoring neuronal function in RTT patients, it is essential to identify MeCP2 targets or modifiers of the phenotype that can be therapeutically modulated.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Familial retinoblastoma and chromosome 13 deletion transmitted via an insertional translocation

TL;DR: Findings indicate that predisposition to retinoblastoma may be attributed to the loss of specific genetic material and that a chromosomal mechanism may explain apparent lack of gene penetrance in certain families.
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An ultramicroscopic study of skin and conjunctival biopsies in chronic neurological disorders of childhood.

TL;DR: Although biochemical analysis is the simplest and most effective technique for the diagnosis of most progressive encephalopathies, skin or conjunctival biopsy is a valuable procedure in patients without detectable enzyme deficiency.
Journal ArticleDOI

A possible case of delayed mutation in man.

TL;DR: A pedigree of split‐hand (Graham & Badgley, 1955), in which several new mutants appear simultaneously in collateral lines, is tentatively explained on the basis of delayed mutation which resulted in two generations of gonadic mosaics.
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