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Citations to this article

Visual phenotype in Williams-Beuren syndrome challenges magnocellular theories explaining human neurodevelopmental visual cortical disorders
Miguel Castelo-Branco, … , Luis Pérez-Jurado, Eduardo Silva
Miguel Castelo-Branco, … , Luis Pérez-Jurado, Eduardo Silva
Published November 21, 2007
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2007;117(12):3720-3729. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI32556.
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Research Article Ophthalmology

Visual phenotype in Williams-Beuren syndrome challenges magnocellular theories explaining human neurodevelopmental visual cortical disorders

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Abstract

Williams-Beuren syndrome (WBS), a neurodevelopmental genetic disorder whose manifestations include visuospatial impairment, provides a unique model to link genetically determined loss of neural cell populations at different levels of the nervous system with neural circuits and visual behavior. Given that several of the genes deleted in WBS are also involved in eye development and the differentiation of retinal layers, we examined the retinal phenotype in WBS patients and its functional relation to global motion perception. We discovered a low-level visual phenotype characterized by decreased retinal thickness, abnormal optic disk concavity, and impaired visual responses in WBS patients compared with age-matched controls by using electrophysiology, confocal and coherence in vivo imaging with cellular resolution, and psychophysics. These mechanisms of impairment are related to the magnocellular pathway, which is involved in the detection of temporal changes in the visual scene. Low-level magnocellular performance did not predict high-level deficits in the integration of motion and 3D information at higher levels, thereby demonstrating independent mechanisms of dysfunction in WBS that will require remediation strategies different from those used in other visuospatial disorders. These findings challenge neurodevelopmental theories that explain cortical deficits based on low-level magnocellular impairment, such as regarding dyslexia.

Authors

Miguel Castelo-Branco, Mafalda Mendes, Ana Raquel Sebastião, Aldina Reis, Mário Soares, Jorge Saraiva, Rui Bernardes, Raquel Flores, Luis Pérez-Jurado, Eduardo Silva

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Total citations by year

Year: 2024 2023 2022 2021 2015 2014 2012 2011 2010 2009 Total
Citations: 1 1 2 1 2 2 2 1 2 1 15
Citation information
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Citations to this article (15)

Title and authors Publication Year
The role of syntaxins in retinal function and health
Tebbe L, Kakakhel M, Al-Ubaidi MR, Naash MI
Frontiers in cellular neuroscience 2024
Optical coherence tomography angiography findings in Williams-Beuren syndrome.
Nassisi M, Mainetti C, Sperti A, Galmozzi G, Aretti A, Leone G, Nicotra V, Grilli F, Rinaldi B, Natacci F, Bedeschi MF, Viola F
2023
Ophthalmic characteristics and retinal vasculature changes in Williams syndrome, and its association with systemic diseases.
Yeh TC, Cheng HC, Li HY, Chi SC, Yang HY, Yu JY, Niu DM, Wang AG
Eye 2022
Novel ophthalmic findings and deep phenotyping in Williams-Beuren syndrome
Huryn LA, Flaherty T, Nolen R, Prasov L, Zein WM, Cukras CA, Osgood S, Raja N, Levin MD, Vitale S, Brooks BP, Hufnagel RB, Kozel BA
The British journal of ophthalmology 2022
Objective differential diagnosis of Noonan and Williams–Beuren syndromes in diverse populations using quantitative facial phenotyping
Porras AR, Summar M, Linguraru MG
Molecular Genetics & Genomic Medicine 2021
Williams syndrome and its cognitive profile: the importance of eye movements
JV Herwegen
Psychology Research and Behavior Management 2015
Facial emotion processing in patients with social anxiety disorder and Williams–Beuren syndrome: an fMRI study
Binelli C, Muñiz A, Subira S, Navines R, Blanco-Hinojo L, Perez-Garcia D, Crippa J, Farré M, Pérez-Jurado L, Pujol J, Martin-Santos R
Journal of psychiatry & neuroscience : JPN 2015
Genetic contributions to visuospatial cognition in Williams syndrome: insights from two contrasting partial deletion patients
H Broadbent, EK Farran, E Chin, K Metcalfe, M Tassabehji, P Turnpenny, F Sansbury, E Meaburn, A Karmiloff-Smith
Journal of Neurodevelopmental Disorders 2014
Lateral preference in Williams-Beuren syndrome is associated with cognition and language.
Pérez-García D, Flores R, Brun-Gasca C, Pérez-Jurado LA
European Child & Adolescent Psychiatry 2014
A Direct Comparison of Local-Global Integration in Autism and other Developmental Disorders: Implications for the Central Coherence Hypothesis
I Bernardino, S Mouga, J Almeida, M Asselen, G Oliveira, M Castelo-Branco
PloS one 2012
Effects of proinflammatory cytokines on the claudin-19 rich tight junctions of human retinal pigment epithelium
S Peng, G Gan, VS Rao, RA Adelman, LJ Rizzolo
Investigative ophthalmology & visual science 2012
Unusual retinal layer organization in HPC-1/syntaxin 1A knockout mice.
Kaneko Y, Suge R, Fujiwara T, Akagawa K, Watanabe S
Journal Of Molecular Histology 2011
Motion-onset visual evoked potentials predict performance during a global direction discrimination task
T Martin, KR Huxlin, V Kavcic
Neuropsychologia 2010
Transcriptome profile in Williams-Beuren syndrome lymphoblast cells reveals gene pathways implicated in glucose intolerance and visuospatial construction deficits.
Antonell A, Vilardell M, Pérez Jurado LA
Human Genetics 2010
Retinotopically defined primary visual cortex in Williams syndrome
RK Olsen, JS Kippenhan, S Japee, P Kohn, CB Mervis, ZS Saad, CA Morris, A Meyer-Lindenberg, KF Berman
Brain 2009

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