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1 with many harboring CHD rare variants having macrocephaly.
2 act with genes implicated in microcephaly or macrocephaly.
3 e in a patient-specific model of autism with macrocephaly.
4 ng studies in 16p11.2 deletion carriers with macrocephaly.
5 methylation profile and a high penetrance of macrocephaly.
6 er have either severe microcephaly or severe macrocephaly.
7 particularly among individuals with comorbid macrocephaly.
8 features consistent with ASD associated with macrocephaly.
9 normocephaly or relatively milder micro- or macrocephaly.
10 lay, intellectual disability, hypotonia, and macrocephaly.
11 RRAS2 RNAs, showed craniofacial defects and macrocephaly.
12 log induced an increase of proliferation and macrocephaly.
13 tism spectrum disorder (ASD) with coincident macrocephaly.
14 -mTOR pathway, are a risk factor for ASD and macrocephaly.
15 ve been reported in individuals with ASD and macrocephaly.
16 ubset of autism spectrum disorder (ASD) with macrocephaly.
17 ism spectrum disorder (ASD) and accompanying macrocephaly.
18 = 42) with 1q21-associated microcephaly and macrocephaly.
19 ait macules (CALMs), axillary freckling, and macrocephaly.
20 uced a potential animal model of autism with macrocephaly.
21 nest indication and scanned body region were macrocephaly (18.8%) and the brain (76.8%), respectively
22 papilloedema (13%) for intracranial tumours; macrocephaly (41%), nausea and vomiting (30%), irritabil
23 from ASXL1- and ASXL3-related disorders are macrocephaly, absence of growth retardation, and more va
25 generated from individuals with autism with macrocephaly also indicate prenatal development as a cri
26 ficantly smaller brains, suggesting relative macrocephaly, also noted as a prominent clinical feature
27 ding, providing novel insights into ASD with macrocephaly and a new methodology for the analysis of g
33 n specific neuronal populations can underlie macrocephaly and behavioral abnormalities reminiscent of
34 Wdfy3-haploinsufficient mice, which display macrocephaly and deficits in motor coordination and asso
35 fic genes and reciprocal subphenotypes (CHD8-macrocephaly and DYRK1A-microcephaly) and replicate the
36 tensive bilateral polymicrogyria, congenital macrocephaly and early-onset refractory epilepsy, in kee
38 ses presented with large ventricles, causing macrocephaly and hydrocephalus suspicion, and all cases
41 We show that organoid size recapitulates macrocephaly and microcephaly phenotypes observed in the
42 neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by macrocephaly and mild-to-moderate developmental delay th
44 exemplified by the hallmark features of BRR: macrocephaly and multiple lipomas, the latter of which o
45 dentified kaptin alterations responsible for macrocephaly and neurodevelopmental delay and define kap
47 loinsufficiency for chd8 in zebrafish led to macrocephaly and posterior hindbrain displacement remini
48 leukodystrophy characterized by early-onset macrocephaly and progressive white matter vacuolation th
53 9 unrelated individuals with autism without macrocephaly and with heterogeneous genetic backgrounds,
55 ts are predisposed to learning disabilities, macrocephaly, and brain tumors as well as abnormalities
56 a well-established risk factor for ASD with macrocephaly, and conditional Pten mouse models have imp
61 variable skeletal anomalies, short stature, macrocephaly, and dysmorphic features; half had intellec
62 exhibited cortical neurogenesis impairment, macrocephaly, and hallmark ASD behaviors, which resemble
64 esis were found to be important for ASD with macrocephaly, and novel co-occurrence patterns of them i
67 evelopmental delay, intellectual disability, macrocephaly, and psychiatric disorders (autism spectrum
68 rome, which is characterized by lipomatosis, macrocephaly, and speckled penis, the PTEN hamartoma tum
70 n apoptosis in the developing brain, whereas macrocephaly arises by increased proliferation and no ch
73 2 (CCND2) stabilization underpins a range of macrocephaly-associated disorders through mutation of CC
74 describe three individuals with overlapping macrocephaly-associated phenotypes who carry the same re
75 subset of CD families and is associated with macrocephaly, ataxia and dysplastic cerebellar gangliocy
76 ase gene RAB39b are associated with X-linked macrocephaly, autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and intell
77 r of mTOR signaling, are prone to developing macrocephaly, autism spectrum disorder (ASD), seizures a
78 ntellectual disability, hypotonia, seizures, macrocephaly, autism spectrum disorder, and delayed moto
79 associated with global developmental delay, macrocephaly, autism, and congenital anomalies (OMIM# 61
81 otential relevance to the pathophysiology of macrocephaly/autism syndrome and autism spectrum disorde
83 ty, hypotonia, dysmorphisms, microcephaly or macrocephaly, autistic features, and epilepsy with reduc
84 as second-born, was referred for progressive macrocephaly, axial hypotonia, developmental delay, and
85 neuronal knock-out of Pten in mice can cause macrocephaly, behavioral changes similar to ASD, and sei
87 tal morbidities, pathological short stature, macrocephaly, cardiometabolic risk factors, and adult no
88 moderate-to-severe intellectual disability, macrocephaly caused by the presence of megalencephaly an
89 available for clinical assessment, including macrocephaly, characteristic facial features, renal anom
90 tal syndrome with characteristic features of macrocephaly, cognitive and motor dysfunction, subcutane
91 ent with missense variants (n = 9) exhibited macrocephaly, combined with mild-to-moderate development
92 vo suppression of chd8 in zebrafish produced macrocephaly comparable to that of humans with inactivat
93 n individuals from four families affected by macrocephaly, cranial hyperostosis, and vertebral endpla
94 hiPSC-derived NPCs from ASD individuals with macrocephaly display an altered DNA replication program
95 racteristics enriched in this group included macrocephaly, distinct faces, and gastrointestinal compl
96 elay, intellectual disability, hearing loss, macrocephaly, distinct facial dysmorphisms, palatal abno
98 ant found in an ASD-affected individual with macrocephaly dysregulates cortical neurogenesis in an AS
99 nd visual system abnormalities, weight loss, macrocephaly, growth failure, and precocious puberty als
100 mutated in a subset of autism patients with macrocephaly; however, the link between the role of PTEN
101 ociated with brain anomalies, heart defects, macrocephaly, hypogonadism, and additional features with
105 d phenotypes including neuronal hypertrophy, macrocephaly, impaired myelination, network hyperactivit
106 autism spectrum disorders, characterized by macrocephaly, impaired social interactions and communica
107 are associated with a severe form of NDD and macrocephaly, indicating their importance in the etiolog
108 ted disorders characterized by tall stature, macrocephaly, intellectual disability, disturbed behavio
109 omatous polyposis condition with features of macrocephaly, intestinal juvenile polyposis, development
113 tion of PTEN are highly variable and include macrocephaly, Lhermitte-Duclos disease (LDD) caused by a
115 cases, as well as ~17% of ASD patients with macrocephaly, making it one of the top ASD-associated ri
118 ure and craniofacial malformations including macrocephaly, midface hypoplasia, micrognathia, frontal
119 with delayed puberty, hypogonadism, relative macrocephaly, moderate short stature, central obesity, u
121 ncoding kaptin, cause a syndrome typified by macrocephaly, neurodevelopmental delay, and seizures.
122 patients with (macro-ASD, n=16) and without macrocephaly (normo-ASD, n=38) and healthy controls (n=1
123 Carriers of 16p11.2 deletion tend to have macrocephaly (or brain enlargement), while those with 16
124 PP2R5D cause intellectual disabilities (ID), macrocephaly, Parkinsonism, and a broad range of neurolo
125 P RNA to rescue the chd8-suppression-induced macrocephaly phenotype and neuronal hyperproliferation.
127 nition of a specific phenotype consisting of macrocephaly, prominent eyes, arched eyebrows, hypertelo
129 r disease develop a leukoencephalopathy with macrocephaly, seizures and psychomotor retardation, lead
131 nce, including neurological features such as macrocephaly, seizures, ataxia and Lhermitte-Duclos dise
132 s well as various brain disorders, including macrocephaly, seizures, Lhermitte-Duclos disease, and au
134 al neurons in the mouse results in seizures, macrocephaly, social interaction deficits and anxiety, r
135 conditional knockout (CKO) mice demonstrated macrocephaly, spontaneous seizures and premature death.
136 on revealed poor visual contact, progressive macrocephaly, substantial axial hypotonia, and limb stif
137 repeat have a more severe ID associated with macrocephaly than do most individuals with GEFD1 variant
139 les of contradicting clinical features (e.g. macrocephaly versus microcephaly and upslanting versus d
140 mans WDFY3 loss-of-function variants lead to macrocephaly via downregulation of the Wnt pathway.
142 y neurodevelopmental alterations in ASD with macrocephaly, we monitored subject-derived induced pluri
143 f nuclear PTEN in the development of ASD and macrocephaly, we previously generated a mouse model with
144 lly significant features of microcephaly and macrocephaly were found in individuals with microdeletio
145 Infants commonly present with progressive macrocephaly whereas children older than 2 years general
146 otypes characterized by chondrodysplasia and macrocephaly, which affect endochondral and intramembran
147 pectrum disorders (ASD) frequently accompany macrocephaly, which often involves hydrocephalic enlarge
148 utatively causing haploinsufficiency lead to macrocephaly, while an opposing pathomechanism due to va