Williams Syndrome - Cause

Cause

Williams Syndrome genes
ASL · BAZ1B · BCL7B · CLDN3 · CLDN4
CLIP2 · EIF4H · ELN · FZD9 · FKBP6
GTF2I · GTF2IRD1 · HIP1 · KCTD7
LAT2 · LIMK1 · MDH2 · NCF1
NSUN5 · POR · RFC2 · STX1A · TBL2
TRIM50 · TRIM73 · TRIM74
WBSCR14 · WBSCR18 · WBSCR21
WBSCR22 · WBSCR23 · WBSCR24
WBSCR27 · WBSCR28

Williams syndrome is caused by the deletion of genetic material from the region q11.23 of chromosome 7. The deleted region includes more than 25 genes, and researchers believe that the loss of several of these genes probably contributes to the characteristic features of this disorder. CLIP2, ELN, GTF2I, GTF2IRD1, and LIMK1 are among the genes that are typically deleted in people with Williams syndrome. Researchers have found that loss of the ELN gene, which codes for the protein elastin, is associated with the connective-tissue abnormalities and cardiovascular disease (specifically supravalvular aortic stenosis and supravalvular pulmonary stenosis) found in many people with this syndrome. Studies suggest that deletion of LIMK1, GTF2I, GTF2IRD1, and perhaps other genes may help explain the characteristic difficulties with visual–spatial tasks. Additionally, there is evidence that the loss of several of these genes, including CLIP2, may contribute to the unique behavioral characteristics, learning disabilities, and other cognitive difficulties seen in Williams syndrome.

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