Human developmental disorders and the Sonic hedgehog pathway

JE Ming, E Roessler, M Muenke - Molecular medicine today, 1998 - cell.com
JE Ming, E Roessler, M Muenke
Molecular medicine today, 1998cell.com
Sonic hedgehog (Shh) is a morphogen that is crucial for normal development of a variety of
organ systems, including the brain and spinal cord, the eye, craniofacial structures, and the
limbs. Mutations in the human SHH gene and genes that encode its downstream
intracellular signaling pathway cause several clinical disorders. These include
holoprosencephaly (HPE, the most common anomaly of the developing forebrain), nevoid
basal cell carcinoma syndrome, sporadic tumors, including basal cell carcinomas, and three …
Abstract
Sonic hedgehog (Shh) is a morphogen that is crucial for normal development of a variety of organ systems, including the brain and spinal cord, the eye, craniofacial structures, and the limbs. Mutations in the human SHH gene and genes that encode its downstream intracellular signaling pathway cause several clinical disorders. These include holoprosencephaly (HPE, the most common anomaly of the developing forebrain), nevoid basal cell carcinoma syndrome, sporadic tumors, including basal cell carcinomas, and three distinct congenital disorders: Greig syndrome Pallister–Hall syndrome, and isolated postaxial polydactyly. These conditions caused by abnormalities in the SHH pathway demonstrate the crucial role of SHH in complex developmental processes, and molecular analyses of these disorders provide insight into the normal function of the SHH pathway in human development.
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