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Dive into the research topics where Matthew Edwards is active.

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Featured researches published by Matthew Edwards.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2004

Meta-Analysis of 13 Genome Scans Reveals Multiple Cleft Lip/Palate Genes with Novel Loci on 9q21 and 2q32-35

Mary L. Marazita; Jeffrey C. Murray; Andrew C. Lidral; Mauricio Arcos-Burgos; Margaret E. Cooper; Toby Goldstein; Brion S. Maher; Sandra Daack-Hirsch; R. E. Schultz; M. Adela Mansilla; L. Leigh Field; You E. Liu; Natalie J. Prescott; Sue Malcolm; Robin M. Winter; Ajit Kisor Ray; Lina M. Moreno; Consuelo Valencia; Katherine Neiswanger; Diego F. Wyszynski; Joan E. Bailey-Wilson; Terri H. Beaty; Iain McIntosh; Jacqueline B. Hetmanski; Gökhan Tunçbilek; Matthew Edwards; Louise A. Harkin; Rodney J. Scott; Laurence G. Roddick

Isolated or nonsyndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate (CL/P) is a common birth defect with a complex etiology. A 10-cM genome scan of 388 extended multiplex families with CL/P from seven diverse populations (2,551 genotyped individuals) revealed CL/P genes in six chromosomal regions, including a novel region at 9q21 (heterogeneity LOD score [HLOD]=6.6). In addition, meta-analyses with the addition of results from 186 more families (six populations; 1,033 genotyped individuals) showed genomewide significance for 10 more regions, including another novel region at 2q32-35 (P=.0004). These are the first genomewide significant linkage results ever reported for CL/P, and they represent an unprecedented demonstration of the power of linkage analysis to detect multiple genes simultaneously for a complex disorder.


Teratology | 1998

Teratogen Update: Gestational Effects of Maternal Hyperthermia Due to Febrile Illnesses and Resultant Patterns of Defects in Humans

John M. Graham; Matthew Edwards; Marshall J. Edwards

This review has covered the pertinent literature concerning the teratogenic effects of hyperthermia in man and experimental animals. This is the first teratogen that was initially discovered in animals and then subsequently found to be a cause for concern in humans when similar patterns of defects were observed. Hyperthermia is a physical agent with a dose-response curve for abortions and malformations, but these effects can be mitigated in some circumstances by the heat shock response (HSR). We have reviewed the known functions of HSR and provided some insight into why embryos have some protection following an initial dose of heat, if it is sufficient to initiate the response. Thus, by reviewing the effects of hyperthermia in experimental animals, as well as malformative and protective mechanisms of teratogenesis, we have attempted to understand the effects of human hyperthermia teratogenesis.


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2006

GDF5 Is a Second Locus for Multiple-Synostosis Syndrome

Katherine Dawson; Petra Seeman; Eiman Sebald; Lily King; Matthew Edwards; John W Williams; S. Mundlos; Deborah Krakow

Multiple-synostosis syndrome is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by progressive symphalangism, carpal/tarsal fusions, deafness, and mild facial dysmorphism. Heterozygosity for functional null mutations in the NOGGIN gene has been shown to be responsible for the disorder. However, in a cohort of six probands with multiple-synostosis syndrome, only one was found to be heterozygous for a NOGGIN mutation (W205X). Linkage studies involving the four-generation family of one of the mutation-negative patients excluded the NOGGIN locus, providing genetic evidence of locus heterogeneity. In this family, polymorphic markers flanking the GDF5 locus were found to cosegregate with the disease, and sequence analysis demonstrated that affected individuals in the family were heterozygous for a novel missense mutation that predicts an R438L substitution in the GDF5 protein. Unlike mutations that lead to haploinsufficiency for GDF5 and produce brachydactyly C, the protein encoded by the multiple-synostosis-syndrome allele was secreted as a mature GDF5 dimer. These data establish locus heterogeneity in multiple-synostosis syndrome and demonstrate that the disorder can result from mutations in either the NOGGIN or the GDF5 gene.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2003

Case-control study of cleft lip or palate after maternal use of topical corticosteroids during pregnancy.

Matthew Edwards; Kingsley E Agho; John Attia; Pedro Diaz; Teresa Hayes; Alice Illingworth; Laurence G. Roddick

A case‐control survey of 48 children with nonsyndromic cleft lip or palate showed a significant increase in prevalence of maternal use of topical corticosteroid preparations in the first trimester of pregnancy, compared to 58 controls born in the same hospital; the odds ratio was 13.154, 95% confidence interval 1.67–586, Pu2009=u20090.0049 on Fishers exact two‐tail test. The results were statistically significant although the wide confidence interval reflected the small sample size. Although older epidemiological studies have not detected any association between systemic corticosteroid treatment and the combined incidence of all congenital malformations, experimental studies over several decades have shown that maternal corticosteroid exposure in several species of animals is specifically associated with oral clefts. This association has been confirmed by more specific case‐control surveys where the cases were children with cleft lip or palate and the exposure was maternal systemic corticosteroid treatment in the first trimester. Only one previous survey also analyzed topical corticosteroids, and it demonstrated an increased odds ratio for cleft lip or palate. A national survey of children with cleft palate will be necessary to evaluate the results of this pilot study.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2005

The adult phenotype in Costello syndrome

Susan M. White; John M. Graham; Bronwyn Kerr; Karen W. Gripp; Rosanna Weksberg; C. Cytrynbaum; J.L. Reeder; Fiona Stewart; Matthew Edwards; Meredith Wilson; Agnes Bankier

We report clinical findings in 17 adults with Costello syndrome ranging in age from 16 to 40 years. Two patients in this series have had bladder carcinoma, the only malignancy reported to affect adults with Costello syndrome. Benign tumors included multiple ductal papillomata in two women, and a fourth ventricle mass in one man, thought to be a choroid plexus papilloma. Endocrine problems in this series were osteoporosis, central hypogonadism, and delayed puberty. Other health problems were symptomatic Chiari malformations in three patients. Four patients had adult‐onset gastro‐esophageal reflux, three of whom had Chiari malformations. Fourteen adults had mild to moderate intellectual disability with three individuals having severe intellectual disability; 15 individuals attained some reading and writing skills and 14 showed ongoing acquisition of new skills into adulthood. On the basis of this data, we recommend that neuro‐imaging be considered in adults with Costello syndrome if they develop symptoms suggestive of a Chiari malformation. In the event of pubertal delay, endocrine investigations are indicated and hormone treatment may be required. Bone density assessments should be performed in adults with Costello syndrome, particularly in those with pubertal abnormalities. Screening for microscopic hematuria as a marker for bladder carcinoma may be indicated, although this requires further evaluation.


Annals of Neurology | 2007

Molecular consequences of dominant Bethlem myopathy collagen VI mutations

Naomi L. Baker; Matthias Mörgelin; Rishika A. Pace; Rachel A. Peat; Naomi E. Adams; R.J. McKinlay Gardner; Lewis P. Rowland; Geoffrey P. Miller; Berten Ceulemans; Mark C. Hannibal; Matthew Edwards; Elizabeth Thompson; Richard Jacobson; R. Quinlivan; Salim Aftimos; Andrew J. Kornberg; Kathryn N. North; John F. Bateman; Shireen R. Lamandé

Dominant mutations in the three collagen VI genes cause Bethlem myopathy, a disorder characterized by proximal muscle weakness and commonly contractures of the fingers, wrists, and ankles. Although more than 20 different dominant mutations have been identified in Bethlem myopathy patients, the biosynthetic consequences of only a subset of these have been studied, and in many cases, the pathogenic mechanisms remain unknown.


Pediatric Research | 1992

Deletion in blood mitochondrial DNA in Kearns-Sayre syndrome

Nathan Fischel-Ghodsian; M. Charlotte Bohlman; Toni R. Prezant; John M. Graham; Stephen D. Cederbaum; Matthew Edwards

ABSTRACTS: Mitochondrial DNA deletions have been described in the Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS) and the Pearsons marrow-pancreas syndrome. In some cases, the same 4 977-bp deletion has been identified in these two very different diseases. Therefore, it is not currently possible to predict the clinical phenotype from the size or location of the deletion. Instead, differential tissue distribution of the deletion has been implicated as one possible determinant of phenotype. In particular, in KSS the deletions have not been detected by Southern blotting in the blood, whereas in Pearsons syndrome they are easily detectable. We describe here an 11-y-old boy with clinically characteristic KSS and a 7.4-kb mitochondrial DNA deletion between aucleotides 7 194 and 14 595. Southern blotting reveals that 75% of the mitochondrial DNA molecules from his peripheral blood have this deletion. This case blurs further the molecular distinction between the KSS and Pearsons marrow-pancreas syndrome, questioning whether tissue distribution is a sufficient explanation for the very different pheaotypes of these disorders.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2007

Paternal uniparental isodisomy for chromosome 14 with mosaicism for a supernumerary marker chromosome 14

Joerg Mattes; Bruce Whitehead; Thomas Liehr; Ian Wilkinson; John Bear; Kerry Fagan; Paul Craven; Bruce Bennetts; Matthew Edwards

Uniparental disomy (UPD) describes the inheritance of two homologous chromosomes from a single parent. Disease phenotypes associated with UPD and chromosomal imprinting, rather than with mutations, include Beckwith–Wiedemann syndrome (paternal UPD11p), Angelman syndrome (paternal UPD15), Prader–Willi syndrome (maternal UPD15), and transient neonatal diabetes (paternal UPD6). Here we report on the first case of paternal uniparental isodisomy of chromosome 14 with a mosaicism for a supernumerary marker chromosome 14. The patient demonstrated a small thorax with a ‘coat hanger’ shape of the ribs, kyphoscoliosis, hypoplasia of the maxilla and mandible, a broad nasal bridge with anteverted nares, contractures of the wrists with ulnar deviation bilaterally, diastasis recti, and marked muscle hypotonia. Vertical skin creases under the chin and stippled epiphyses of the humeri were features not previously described in patients with paternal UPD14. This case illustrates that as with the finding of an isochromosome, a supernumerary marker chromosome can be an important clue to the presence of UPD14.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2003

PEHO and PEHO-like syndromes: report of five Australian cases.

M.J. Field; Padraic J. Grattan-Smith; S.M. Piper; Elizabeth Thompson; Eric Haan; Matthew Edwards; S. James; Ian Wilkinson; Lesley C. Adès

PEHO syndrome is a rare progressive infantile encephalopathy with onset within the first few months of life. Few patients fulfilling the diagnostic criteria for PEHO syndrome have been reported outside Finland. Affected infants have facial dysmorphism and suffer from severe hypotonia, profound mental retardation, convulsions (often with a hypsarrhythmic EEG pattern), transient or persistent peripheral oedema, and optic atrophy. Cerebellar and brainstem atrophy are usually present on neuroimaging. A PEHO‐like syndrome has been described, in which the affected individuals have neither optic atrophy nor the typical neuroradiological findings. We report five Australian patients, the first with classical features of PEHO syndrome, and four who have a PEHO‐like disorder. We compare their features with other published cases. We suggest that PEHO or a PEHO‐like syndrome may affect more patients than are currently identified, based on the original diagnostic criteria for this disorder.


American Journal of Medical Genetics | 1998

Nevoid hypertrichosis with multiple patches of hair that underwent almost complete spontaneous resolution

Tracy Dudding; Maureen Rogers; Laurence Roddick; John Relic; Matthew Edwards

Four cases with multiple patches of nevoid hypertrichosis have been reported. This fifth patient had multiple patches of nevoid hypertrichosis that underwent almost complete spontaneous resolution. Areas of unaffected skin showed depigmentation that followed the lines of Blaschko.

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John M. Graham

University of California

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Bruce Whitehead

Boston Children's Hospital

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Jan Liebelt

Boston Children's Hospital

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John Pater

Boston Children's Hospital

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Karen W. Gripp

Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children

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