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1.
Neuromuscul Disord ; 31(5): 462-465, 2021 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33741226

ABSTRACT

Duchenne muscular dystrophy is an X-Linked neuromuscular disorder, and the most common muscular dystrophy. Neuropsychiatric phenotype associated to DMD gene mutations include now low IQ scores, epilepsy, autism, and attention deficit disorder. These have been observed with higher frequency in mutations that disrupt the short isoforms Dp71 and Dp140. West syndrome has been previously reported in two unrelated patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Here, we report the third patient with West syndrome who had a novel hemizygous nonsense pathogenic variant in the exon 8 of the DMD gene c.811C>T, p.(Gln271*), suggesting West syndrome as part of the neuropsychiatric spectrum in Duchenne muscular dystrophy.


Subject(s)
Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne/genetics , Phenotype , Spasms, Infantile/genetics , Dystrophin/genetics , Epilepsy/genetics , Exons , Humans , Infant , Intellectual Disability/genetics , Male , Mutation , Protein Isoforms/genetics
2.
Infect Genet Evol ; 27: 543-50, 2014 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24882702

ABSTRACT

Modeling and empirical evidence suggests that Lyme disease is undergoing geographic expansion from principal foci in the midwestern and northeastern United States. Virginia is at the southern edge of the current expansion zone and has seen dramatic rise in human Lyme disease cases since 2007, potentially owing to a recent increase in vector abundance. Ixodes scapularis is known throughout the eastern US but behavioral or physiological variation between northern and southern lineages might lead northern-variant ticks to more frequently parasitize humans. We hypothesized that recent spatial and numerical increase in Lyme disease cases is associated with demographic and/or spatial expansion of I. scapularis and that signals of these phenomena would be detectable and discernable in population genetic signals. In summer and fall 2011, we collected nymphal I. scapularis by drag sampling and adult I. scapularis from deer carcasses at hunting check stations at nine sites arranged along an east-west transect through central Virginia. We analyzed 16S mtDNA sequences data from up to 24 I. scapularis individuals collected from each site and detected a total of 24 haplotypes containing 29 segregating sites. We found no evidence for population genetic structure among these sites but we did find strong signals of both demographic and spatial expansion throughout our study system. We found two haplotypes (one individual each) representing a lineage of ticks that is only found in the southeastern United States, with the remaining individuals representing a less genetically diverse clade that is typical of the northern United States, but that has also been detected in the American South. Taken together, these results lead us to conclude that I. scapularis populations in Virginia are expanding and that this expansion may account for recent observed increases in Lyme disease.


Subject(s)
Genetics, Population , Ixodes/classification , Ixodes/genetics , Lyme Disease/epidemiology , Spatial Analysis , Alleles , Animals , Deer/parasitology , Gene Frequency , Geography , Haplotypes , Humans , Lyme Disease/transmission , Phylogeny , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S , Virginia/epidemiology
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