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Review
. 2009 Nov 24;164(1):257-71.
doi: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2009.04.033. Epub 2009 Apr 17.

Insights into brain development from neurogenetic syndromes: evidence from fragile X syndrome, Williams syndrome, Turner syndrome and velocardiofacial syndrome

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Review

Insights into brain development from neurogenetic syndromes: evidence from fragile X syndrome, Williams syndrome, Turner syndrome and velocardiofacial syndrome

E Walter et al. Neuroscience. .

Erratum in

  • Neuroscience. 2010 Feb 3;165(3):1011

Abstract

Over the past few decades, behavioral, neuroimaging and molecular studies of neurogenetic conditions, such as Williams, fragile X, Turner and velocardiofacial (22q11.2 deletion) syndromes, have led to important insights regarding brain development. These investigations allow researchers to examine "experiments of nature" in which the deletion or alteration of one gene or a contiguous set of genes can be linked to aberrant brain structure or function. Converging evidence across multiple imaging modalities has now begun to highlight the abnormal neural circuitry characterizing many individual neurogenetic syndromes. Furthermore, there has been renewed interest in combining analyses across neurogenetic conditions in order to search for common organizing principles in development. In this review, we highlight converging evidence across syndromes from multiple neuroimaging modalities, with a particular emphasis on functional imaging. In addition, we discuss the commonalities and differences pertaining to selective deficits in visuospatial processing that occur across four neurogenetic syndromes. We suggest avenues for future exploration, with the goal of achieving a deeper understanding of the neural abnormalities in these affected populations.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Potential molecular mechanism for m-pathway (dorsal visual stream) disruption in fragile X syndrome and Williams syndrome. FMRP is downregulated in fragile X syndrome; LIMK1 is deleted in the typical Williams syndrome deletion.

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