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    Date Issued2010 - 2014 (1)2002 - 2009 (1)Author
    Egeland, J. A. (2)
    Galdzicka, Marzena (2)Cai, J-F (1)Elston, R. C. (1)Ginns, Edward I (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationBrudnick Neuropsychiatric Research Institute, Department of Psychiatry (1)Department of Pathology (1)Department of Pediatrics (1)Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center (1)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordPsychiatry (2)*Jews (1)Ellis-Van Creveld Syndrome (1)Female (1)Genetic Heterogeneity (1)View MoreJournalMolecular genetics and metabolism (1)Molecular psychiatry (1)

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    Disruption of sonic hedgehog signaling in Ellis-van Creveld dwarfism confers protection against bipolar affective disorder

    Ginns, Edward I; Galdzicka, Marzena; Elston, R. C.; Song, Y. E.; Paul, S. M.; Egeland, J. A. (2014-10-14)
    Ellis-van Creveld syndrome, an autosomal recessively inherited chondrodysplastic dwarfism, is frequent among Old Order Amish of Pennsylvania. Decades of longitudinal research on bipolar affective disorder (BPAD) revealed cosegregation of high numbers of EvC and Bipolar I (BPI) cases in several large Amish families descending from the same pioneer. Despite the high prevalence of both disorders in these families, no EvC individual has ever been reported with BPI. The proximity of the EVC gene to our previously reported chromosome 4p16 BPAD locus with protective alleles, coupled with detailed clinical observations that EvC and BPI do not occur in the same individuals, led us to hypothesize that the genetic defect causing EvC in the Amish confers protection from BPI. This hypothesis is supported by a significant negative association of these two disorders when contrasted with absence of disease (P=0.029, Fisher's exact test, two-sided, verified by permutation to estimate the null distribution of the test statistic). As homozygous Amish EVC mutations causing EvC dwarfism do so by disrupting sonic hedgehog (Shh) signaling, our data implicate Shh signaling in the underlying pathophysiology of BPAD. Understanding how disrupted Shh signaling protects against BPI could uncover variants in the Shh pathway that cause or increase risk for this and related mood disorders.
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    A new gene, EVC2, is mutated in Ellis-van Creveld syndrome

    Galdzicka, Marzena; Patnala, Sujatha; Hirshman, M. G.; Cai, J-F; Nitowsky, H.; Egeland, J. A.; Ginns, Edward I. (2002-12-01)
    Ellis-van Creveld syndrome (EvC; MIM 225500) is an autosomal recessive chondrodysplastic dwarfism. Thus far, the identified mutations in the EVC gene located on chromosome 4p16 have only accounted for illness in a small proportion of affected individuals. In this report we describe a novel gene, EVC2, that is mutated in an Ashkenazi individual with EvC syndrome. Our findings demonstrate for the first time that the heterogeneity observed in this disorder is not solely the result of mutations in a single gene.
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