Rett syndrome: the Brazilian contribution to the gene discovery
ABSTRACT A brief history of the syndrome discovered by Andreas Rett is reported in this paper. Although having been described in 1966, the syndrome was only recognized by the international community after a report by Hagberg et al. in 1983. Soon, its importance was evident as a relatively frequent cause of severe encephalopathy among girls. From the beginning it was difficult to explain the absence of male patients and the almost total predominance of sporadic cases (99%), with very few familial cases. For these reasons, it was particularly difficult to investigate this condition until 1997, when a particular Brazilian family greatly helped in the final discovery of the gene, and in the clarification of its genetic mechanism. Brief references are made to the importance of the MECP2 gene, 18 years later, as well as to its role in synaptogenesis and future prospects.
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Academia Brasileira de Neurologia - ABNEURO
2019
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oai:scielo:S0004-282X20190012008962020-04-17Rett syndrome: the Brazilian contribution to the gene discoveryPereira,José Luiz PintoPedroso,José LuizBarsottini,Orlando G. P.Meira,Alex TiburtinoTeive,Hélio A. G. Rett syndrome brain diseases genes ABSTRACT A brief history of the syndrome discovered by Andreas Rett is reported in this paper. Although having been described in 1966, the syndrome was only recognized by the international community after a report by Hagberg et al. in 1983. Soon, its importance was evident as a relatively frequent cause of severe encephalopathy among girls. From the beginning it was difficult to explain the absence of male patients and the almost total predominance of sporadic cases (99%), with very few familial cases. For these reasons, it was particularly difficult to investigate this condition until 1997, when a particular Brazilian family greatly helped in the final discovery of the gene, and in the clarification of its genetic mechanism. Brief references are made to the importance of the MECP2 gene, 18 years later, as well as to its role in synaptogenesis and future prospects.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessAcademia Brasileira de Neurologia - ABNEUROArquivos de Neuro-Psiquiatria v.77 n.12 20192019-12-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0004-282X2019001200896en10.1590/0004-282x20190110 |
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Pereira,José Luiz Pinto Pedroso,José Luiz Barsottini,Orlando G. P. Meira,Alex Tiburtino Teive,Hélio A. G. |
spellingShingle |
Pereira,José Luiz Pinto Pedroso,José Luiz Barsottini,Orlando G. P. Meira,Alex Tiburtino Teive,Hélio A. G. Rett syndrome: the Brazilian contribution to the gene discovery |
author_facet |
Pereira,José Luiz Pinto Pedroso,José Luiz Barsottini,Orlando G. P. Meira,Alex Tiburtino Teive,Hélio A. G. |
author_sort |
Pereira,José Luiz Pinto |
title |
Rett syndrome: the Brazilian contribution to the gene discovery |
title_short |
Rett syndrome: the Brazilian contribution to the gene discovery |
title_full |
Rett syndrome: the Brazilian contribution to the gene discovery |
title_fullStr |
Rett syndrome: the Brazilian contribution to the gene discovery |
title_full_unstemmed |
Rett syndrome: the Brazilian contribution to the gene discovery |
title_sort |
rett syndrome: the brazilian contribution to the gene discovery |
description |
ABSTRACT A brief history of the syndrome discovered by Andreas Rett is reported in this paper. Although having been described in 1966, the syndrome was only recognized by the international community after a report by Hagberg et al. in 1983. Soon, its importance was evident as a relatively frequent cause of severe encephalopathy among girls. From the beginning it was difficult to explain the absence of male patients and the almost total predominance of sporadic cases (99%), with very few familial cases. For these reasons, it was particularly difficult to investigate this condition until 1997, when a particular Brazilian family greatly helped in the final discovery of the gene, and in the clarification of its genetic mechanism. Brief references are made to the importance of the MECP2 gene, 18 years later, as well as to its role in synaptogenesis and future prospects. |
publisher |
Academia Brasileira de Neurologia - ABNEURO |
publishDate |
2019 |
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http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0004-282X2019001200896 |
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