← Back

Developmental Delay

Topic spotlight
TopicWorld Wide

developmental delay

Discover seminars, jobs, and research tagged with developmental delay across World Wide.
4 curated items2 Seminars2 ePosters
Updated over 2 years ago
4 items · developmental delay
4 results
SeminarNeuroscience

Epigenetic rewiring in Schinzel-Giedion syndrome

Alessandro Sessa, PhD
San Raffaele Scientific Institute, Milan (Italy), Stem Cell & Neurogenesis Unit
May 2, 2023

During life, a variety of specialized cells arise to grant the right and timely corrected functions of tissues and organs. Regulation of chromatin in defining specialized genomic regions (e.g. enhancers) plays a key role in developmental transitions from progenitors into cell lineages. These enhancers, properly topologically positioned in 3D space, ultimately guide the transcriptional programs. It is becoming clear that several pathologies converge in differential enhancer usage with respect to physiological situations. However, why some regulatory regions are physiologically preferred, while some others can emerge in certain conditions, including other fate decisions or diseases, remains obscure. Schinzel-Giedion syndrome (SGS) is a rare disease with symptoms such as severe developmental delay, congenital malformations, progressive brain atrophy, intractable seizures, and infantile death. SGS is caused by mutations in the SETBP1 gene that results in its accumulation further leading to the downstream accumulation of SET. The oncoprotein SET has been found as part of the histone chaperone complex INHAT that blocks the activity of histone acetyltransferases suggesting that SGS may (i) represent a natural model of alternative chromatin regulation and (ii) offer chances to study downstream (mal)adaptive mechanisms. I will present our work on the characterization of SGS in appropriate experimental models including iPSC-derived cultures and mouse.

SeminarNeuroscienceRecording

Mechanisms of CACNA1A-associated developmental epileptic encephalopathies

Elsa Rossignol
University of Montreal
Nov 2, 2021

Developmental epileptic encephalopathies are early-onset epilepsies, often refractory to therapy, with developmental delay or regression. These disorders carry poor neurodevelopmental prognosis, with long-term refractory epilepsy and persistent cognitive, behavioral and motor deficits. Mutations in the CACNA1A gene, encoding the pore-forming α1 subunit of CaV2.1 voltage-gated calcium channels, result in a spectrum of neurological disorders, including severe, early-onset epileptic encephalopathies. Recent work from the Rossignol lab helped characterize the phenotypic spectrum of CACNA1A-related epilepsies in humans. Using conditional genetics and novel animal models, the Rossignol lab unveiled some of the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms, including critical deficits in cortical inhibition, resulting in seizures and a range of cognitive-behavioral deficits. Importantly, Dr. Rossignol’s team demonstrated that the targeted activation of specific GABAergic interneuron populations in selected cortical regions prevents motor seizures and reverts attention deficits and cognitive rigidity in mouse models of the disorder. These recent findings open novel avenues for the treatment of these severe CACNA1A-associated neurodevelopmental disorders.

ePoster

Developmental delay in striatal synaptic pruning in lysosomal storage disorders

Mariagrazia Monaco, Cristina Somma, Alessandro Nicois, Maria de Risi, Luigia Cristino, Elvira de Leonibus

FENS Forum 2024

ePoster

De novo variants in GABRA4 are associated with a neurological phenotypic spectrum including developmental delay, behavioral abnormalities, and epilepsy

Margot Ernst, Martin Krenn, Florian D. Vogel, Thomas Stockner, Ralph Gradisch, Samin A. Sajan, Matias Wagner, Ira Benkel- Herrenbrück

FENS Forum 2024