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Congenital imprinting disorders: EUCID.net - a network to decipher their aetiology and to improve the diagnostic and clinical care

Congenital imprinting disorders: EUCID.net - a network to decipher their aetiology and to improve the diagnostic and clinical care
Congenital imprinting disorders: EUCID.net - a network to decipher their aetiology and to improve the diagnostic and clinical care
Imprinting disorders (IDs) are a group of eight rare but probably underdiagnosed congenital diseases affecting growth, development and metabolism. They are caused by similar molecular changes affecting regulation, dosage or the genomic sequence of imprinted genes. Each ID is characterised by specific clinical features, and, as each appeared to be associated with specific imprinting defects, they have been widely regarded as separate entities. However, they share clinical characteristics and can show overlapping molecular alterations. Nevertheless, IDs are usually studied separately despite their common underlying (epi)genetic aetiologies, and their basic pathogenesis and long-term clinical consequences remain largely unknown. Efforts to elucidate the aetiology of IDs are currently fragmented across Europe, and standardisation of diagnostic and clinical management is lacking. The new consortium EUCID.net (European network of congenital imprinting disorders) now aims to promote better clinical care and scientific investigation of imprinting disorders by establishing a concerted multidisciplinary alliance of clinicians, researchers, patients and families. By encompassing all IDs and establishing a wide ranging and collaborative network, EUCID.net brings together a wide variety of expertise and interests to engender new collaborations and initiatives.
imprinting disorders, imprinted genes, epimutation, uniparental disomy, EUCID.net, networking
1868-7075
23
Eggermann, Thomas
f65876e2-0250-48e9-be6c-40abd9b43a6f
Netchine, Irène
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Temple, I Karen
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Tümer, Zeynep
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Monk, David
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Mackay, Deborah
588a653e-9785-4a00-be71-4e547850ee4a
Grønskov, Karin
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Riccio, Andrea
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Linglart, Agnès
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Maher, Eamonn R
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Eggermann, Thomas
f65876e2-0250-48e9-be6c-40abd9b43a6f
Netchine, Irène
8f1b8436-aa93-4722-be70-fb70351bf078
Temple, I Karen
d63e7c66-9fb0-46c8-855d-ee2607e6c226
Tümer, Zeynep
75c1d336-a336-4ceb-a19a-e20e1eeae033
Monk, David
3afd0958-2e57-4135-a20a-462f59dce4d5
Mackay, Deborah
588a653e-9785-4a00-be71-4e547850ee4a
Grønskov, Karin
2ae3424f-4a5c-424f-b435-0cab260430a9
Riccio, Andrea
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Linglart, Agnès
05219f7f-aa9b-472f-b552-63d00b0b6d70
Maher, Eamonn R
0ffc76f0-a381-4cc0-ba2b-7f5df847e161

Eggermann, Thomas, Netchine, Irène, Temple, I Karen, Tümer, Zeynep, Monk, David, Mackay, Deborah, Grønskov, Karin, Riccio, Andrea, Linglart, Agnès and Maher, Eamonn R (2015) Congenital imprinting disorders: EUCID.net - a network to decipher their aetiology and to improve the diagnostic and clinical care. Clinical Epigenetics, 7 (1), 23. (doi:10.1186/s13148-015-0050-z).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Imprinting disorders (IDs) are a group of eight rare but probably underdiagnosed congenital diseases affecting growth, development and metabolism. They are caused by similar molecular changes affecting regulation, dosage or the genomic sequence of imprinted genes. Each ID is characterised by specific clinical features, and, as each appeared to be associated with specific imprinting defects, they have been widely regarded as separate entities. However, they share clinical characteristics and can show overlapping molecular alterations. Nevertheless, IDs are usually studied separately despite their common underlying (epi)genetic aetiologies, and their basic pathogenesis and long-term clinical consequences remain largely unknown. Efforts to elucidate the aetiology of IDs are currently fragmented across Europe, and standardisation of diagnostic and clinical management is lacking. The new consortium EUCID.net (European network of congenital imprinting disorders) now aims to promote better clinical care and scientific investigation of imprinting disorders by establishing a concerted multidisciplinary alliance of clinicians, researchers, patients and families. By encompassing all IDs and establishing a wide ranging and collaborative network, EUCID.net brings together a wide variety of expertise and interests to engender new collaborations and initiatives.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 26 January 2015
Published date: 14 March 2015
Keywords: imprinting disorders, imprinted genes, epimutation, uniparental disomy, EUCID.net, networking
Organisations: Human Development & Health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 375439
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/375439
ISSN: 1868-7075
PURE UUID: 747e0aa7-8745-4065-b03e-cce1e69b956a
ORCID for I Karen Temple: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6045-1781
ORCID for Deborah Mackay: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3088-4401

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 26 Mar 2015 14:15
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:01

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Contributors

Author: Thomas Eggermann
Author: Irène Netchine
Author: I Karen Temple ORCID iD
Author: Zeynep Tümer
Author: David Monk
Author: Deborah Mackay ORCID iD
Author: Karin Grønskov
Author: Andrea Riccio
Author: Agnès Linglart
Author: Eamonn R Maher

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