نتایج جستجو برای: d4z4

تعداد نتایج: 154  

2012
Ebe Pastorello Michelangelo Cao Carlo P. Trevisan

INTRODUCTION FacioScapuloHumeral Muscular Dystrophy (FSHD), a disease linked to a heterozygous D4Z4 deletion on chromosome 4q35, typically starts with shoulder-girdle and facial muscle involvement. Atypical presentations have occasionally been reported, but their frequency has still not been defined. PATIENTS AND METHODS We studied the occurrence rate of FSHD with atypical onset in 122 sympto...

Journal: :Cancer research 2006
Benoît Cadieux Tsui-Ting Ching Scott R VandenBerg Joseph F Costello

Genome-wide reduction in 5-methylcytosine is an epigenetic hallmark of human tumorigenesis. Experimentally induced hypomethylation in mice promotes genomic instability and is sufficient to initiate tumorigenesis. Here, we report that global hypomethylation is common in primary human glioblastomas [glioblastoma multiforme (GBM)] and can affect up to an estimated 10 million CpG dinucleotides per ...

Journal: :Molecules 2015
Sachchida Nand Pandey Hunain Khawaja Yi-Wen Chen

Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is believed to be caused by aberrant expression of double homeobox 4 (DUX4) due to epigenetic changes of the D4Z4 region at chromosome 4q35. Detecting DUX4 is challenging due to its stochastic expression pattern and low transcription level. In this study, we examined different cDNA synthesis strategies and the sensitivity for DUX4 detection. In addi...

Journal: :Journal of the Royal Society, Interface 2015
Christopher R S Banerji Paul Knopp Louise A Moyle Simone Severini Richard W Orrell Andrew E Teschendorff Peter S Zammit

Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is an incurable disease, characterized by skeletal muscle weakness and wasting. Genetically, FSHD is characterized by contraction or hypomethylation of repeat D4Z4 units on chromosome 4, which causes aberrant expression of the transcription factor DUX4 from the last repeat. Many genes have been implicated in FSHD pathophysiology, but an integrated m...

2006
Benoît Cadieux Tsui-Ting Ching Scott R. VandenBerg Benoı̂t Cadieux Joseph F. Costello

Genome-wide reduction in 5-methylcytosine is an epigenetic hallmark of human tumorigenesis. Experimentally induced hypomethylation in mice promotes genomic instability and is sufficient to initiate tumorigenesis. Here, we report that global hypomethylation is common in primary human glioblastomas [glioblastoma multiforme (GBM)] and can affect up to an estimated 10 million CpG dinucleotides per ...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2009
Patricia Arashiro Iris Eisenberg Alvin T Kho Antonia M P Cerqueira Marta Canovas Helga C A Silva Rita C M Pavanello Sergio Verjovski-Almeida Louis M Kunkel Mayana Zatz

Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is a progressive muscle disorder that has been associated with a contraction of 3.3-kb repeats on chromosome 4q35. FSHD is characterized by a wide clinical inter- and intrafamilial variability, ranging from wheelchair-bound patients to asymptomatic carriers. Our study is unique in comparing the gene expression profiles from related affected, asympto...

2011
Sergia Bortolanza Alessandro Nonis Francesca Sanvito Simona Maciotta Giovanni Sitia Jessica Wei Yvan Torrente Clelia Di Serio Joel R Chamberlain Davide Gabellini

Treatment of dominantly inherited muscle disorders remains a difficult task considering the need to eliminate the pathogenic gene product in a body-wide fashion. We show here that it is possible to reverse dominant muscle disease in a mouse model of facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD). FSHD is a common form of muscular dystrophy associated with a complex cascade of epigenetic events f...

Journal: :Human molecular genetics 2012
Takako Iida Jones Jennifer C J Chen Fedik Rahimov Sachiko Homma Patricia Arashiro Mary Lou Beermann Oliver D King Jeffrey B Miller Louis M Kunkel Charles P Emerson Kathryn R Wagner Peter L Jones

Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD), the most prevalent myopathy afflicting both children and adults, is predominantly associated with contractions in the 4q35-localized macrosatellite D4Z4 repeat array. Recent studies have proposed that FSHD pathology is caused by the misexpression of the DUX4 (double homeobox 4) gene resulting in production of a pathogenic protein, DUX4-FL, which ha...

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