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A novel pericentric inversion of chromosome 3 cosegregates with a developmental-behavioural phenotype

Version 2 2024-09-17, 02:04
Version 1 2023-05-16, 14:01
journal contribution
posted on 2024-09-17, 02:04 authored by D Efron, MB Delatycki, MG de Silva, AL Langbein, WL Slaghuis, A Larson, HHM Dahl, SM Forrest
Fanconi anaemia (FA) is an autosomal recessive disease characterised by congenital abnormalities, defective haemopoiesis, and a high risk of developing acute myeloid leukaemia and certain solid tumours. Chromosomal instability, especially on exposure to alkylating agents, may be shown in affected subjects and is the basis for a diagnostic test. FA can be caused by mutations in at least seven different genes. Interaction pathways have been established, both between the FA proteins and other proteins involved in DNA damage repair, such as ATM, BRCA1 and BRCA2, thereby providing a link with other disorders in which defective DNA damage repair is a feature. This review summarises the clinical features of FA and the natural history of the disease, discusses diagnosis and management, and puts the recent molecular advances into the context of the cellular and clinical FA phenotype.

History

Publication title

Journal of Medical Genetics

Volume

40

Issue

1

Pagination

1-5

ISSN

0022-2593

Department/School

Psychology

Publisher

B M J Publishing Group

Publication status

  • Published

Place of publication

United Kingdom

Socio-economic Objectives

200409 Mental health

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