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Tang, N. Smith-Magenis Syndrome. Encyclopedia. Available online: https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/5700 (accessed on 26 April 2024).
Tang N. Smith-Magenis Syndrome. Encyclopedia. Available at: https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/5700. Accessed April 26, 2024.
Tang, Nora. "Smith-Magenis Syndrome" Encyclopedia, https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/5700 (accessed April 26, 2024).
Tang, N. (2020, December 25). Smith-Magenis Syndrome. In Encyclopedia. https://encyclopedia.pub/entry/5700
Tang, Nora. "Smith-Magenis Syndrome." Encyclopedia. Web. 25 December, 2020.
Smith-Magenis Syndrome
Edit

Smith-Magenis syndrome is a developmental disorder that affects many parts of the body.

genetic conditions

1. Introduction

The major features of this condition include mild to moderate intellectual disability, delayed speech and language skills, distinctive facial features, sleep disturbances, and behavioral problems.

Most people with Smith-Magenis syndrome have a broad, square-shaped face with deep-set eyes, full cheeks, and a prominent lower jaw. The middle of the face and the bridge of the nose often appear flattened. The mouth tends to turn downward with a full, outward-curving upper lip. These facial differences can be subtle in early childhood, but they usually become more distinctive in later childhood and adulthood. Dental abnormalities are also common in affected individuals.

Disrupted sleep patterns are characteristic of Smith-Magenis syndrome, typically beginning early in life. Affected people may be very sleepy during the day, but they have trouble falling asleep at night and awaken several times during the night and early morning.

People with Smith-Magenis syndrome typically have affectionate, engaging personalities, but most also have behavioral problems. These include frequent temper tantrums and outbursts, aggression, anxiety, impulsiveness, and difficulty paying attention. Self-injury, including biting, hitting, head banging, and skin picking, is very common. Repetitive self-hugging is a behavioral trait that may be unique to Smith-Magenis syndrome. Some people with this condition also compulsively lick their fingers and flip pages of books and magazines (a behavior known as "lick and flip").

Other signs and symptoms of Smith-Magenis syndrome include short stature, abnormal curvature of the spine (scoliosis), reduced sensitivity to pain and temperature, and a hoarse voice. Some people with this disorder have ear abnormalities that lead to hearing loss. Affected individuals may have eye abnormalities that cause nearsightedness (myopia) and other vision problems. Although less common, heart and kidney defects also have been reported in people with Smith-Magenis syndrome.

2. Frequency

Smith-Magenis syndrome affects at least 1 in 25,000 individuals worldwide. However, researchers believe that many people with this condition are not diagnosed, so the true prevalence may be closer to 1 in 15,000 individuals.

3. Causes

In most people with Smith-Magenis syndrome, the condition results from the deletion of a small piece of chromosome 17 in each cell. This deletion occurs on the short (p) arm of the chromosome at a position designated p11.2. The deleted segment most often includes approximately 3.7 million DNA building blocks (base pairs), also written as 3.7 megabases (Mb). (An extra copy of this segment causes a related condition called Potocki-Lupski syndrome.) Occasionally the deletion is larger or smaller. All of the deletions affect one of the two copies of chromosome 17 in each cell.

Although the deleted region contains multiple genes, researchers believe that the loss of one particular gene, RAI1, underlies many of the characteristic features of Smith-Magenis syndrome. All of the deletions known to cause the condition contain this gene. The RAI1 gene provides instructions for making a protein that helps regulate the activity (expression) of other genes. Although most of the genes regulated by the RAI1 protein have not been identified, this protein appears to control the expression of several genes involved in daily (circadian) rhythms, such as the sleep-wake cycle. Studies suggest that the deletion leads to a reduced amount of RAI1 protein in cells, which disrupts the expression of genes that influence circadian rhythms. These changes may account for the sleep disturbances that occur with Smith-Magenis syndrome. It is unclear how a loss of one copy of the RAI1 gene leads to the other physical, mental, and behavioral problems associated with this condition.

A small percentage of people with Smith-Magenis syndrome have a mutation in the RAI1 gene instead of a chromosomal deletion. Although these individuals have many of the major features of the condition, they are less likely than people with a deletion to have short stature, hearing loss, and heart or kidney abnormalities. It is likely that, in people with a deletion, the loss of other genes in the deleted region accounts for these additional signs and symptoms; the role of these genes is under study.

4. Inheritance

Smith-Magenis syndrome is usually not inherited. This condition typically results from a chromosomal deletion or an RAI1 gene mutation that occurs during the formation of reproductive cells (eggs or sperm) or in early fetal development. Most people with Smith-Magenis syndrome have no history of the condition in their family.

In a small number of cases, people with Smith-Magenis syndrome have inherited the deletion or mutation from an unaffected mother who had the genetic change only in her egg cells. This phenomenon is called germline mosaicism.

5. Other Names for This Condition

  • 17p- syndrome

  • 17p11.2 monosomy

  • chromosome 17p deletion syndrome

  • deletion 17p syndrome

  • partial monosomy 17p

  • SMS

References

  1. Carmona-Mora P, Encina CA, Canales CP, Cao L, Molina J, Kairath P, Young JI,Walz K. Functional and cellular characterization of human Retinoic Acid Induced 1(RAI1) mutations associated with Smith-Magenis Syndrome. BMC Mol Biol. 2010 Aug25;11:63. doi: 10.1186/1471-2199-11-63.
  2. De Leersnyder H. Smith-Magenis syndrome. Handb Clin Neurol. 2013;111:295-6.doi: 10.1016/B978-0-444-52891-9.00034-8. Review.
  3. Elsea SH, Williams SR. Smith-Magenis syndrome: haploinsufficiency of RAI1results in altered gene regulation in neurological and metabolic pathways. ExpertRev Mol Med. 2011 Apr 19;13:e14. doi: 10.1017/S1462399411001827. Review.
  4. Girirajan S, Elsas LJ 2nd, Devriendt K, Elsea SH. RAI1 variations inSmith-Magenis syndrome patients without 17p11.2 deletions. J Med Genet. 2005Nov;42(11):820-8.
  5. Girirajan S, Vlangos CN, Szomju BB, Edelman E, Trevors CD, Dupuis L, Nezarati M, Bunyan DJ, Elsea SH. Genotype-phenotype correlation in Smith-Magenis syndrome:evidence that multiple genes in 17p11.2 contribute to the clinical spectrum.Genet Med. 2006 Jul;8(7):417-27.
  6. Madduri N, Peters SU, Voigt RG, Llorente AM, Lupski JR, Potocki L. Cognitiveand adaptive behavior profiles in Smith-Magenis syndrome. J Dev Behav Pediatr.2006 Jun;27(3):188-92.
  7. Neira-Fresneda J, Potocki L. Neurodevelopmental Disorders Associated withAbnormal Gene Dosage: Smith-Magenis and Potocki-Lupski Syndromes. J PediatrGenet. 2015 Sep;4(3):159-67. doi: 10.1055/s-0035-1564443.Review.
  8. Potocki L, Glaze D, Tan DX, Park SS, Kashork CD, Shaffer LG, Reiter RJ, LupskiJR. Circadian rhythm abnormalities of melatonin in Smith-Magenis syndrome. J Med Genet. 2000 Jun;37(6):428-33.
  9. Smith AC, Dykens E, Greenberg F. Behavioral phenotype of Smith-Magenissyndrome (del 17p11.2). Am J Med Genet. 1998 Mar 28;81(2):179-85. Review.
  10. Smith ACM, Boyd KE, Brennan C, Charles J, Elsea SH, Finucane BM, Foster R,Gropman A, Girirajan S, Haas-Givler B. Smith-Magenis Syndrome. 2001 Oct 22[updated 2019 Sep 5]. In: Adam MP, Ardinger HH, Pagon RA, Wallace SE, Bean LJH,Stephens K, Amemiya A, editors. GeneReviews® [Internet]. Seattle (WA): Universityof Washington, Seattle; 1993-2020. Available fromhttp://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK1310/
  11. Tomona N, Smith AC, Guadagnini JP, Hart TC. Craniofacial and dental phenotype of Smith-Magenis syndrome. Am J Med Genet A. 2006 Dec 1;140(23):2556-61.
  12. Zori RT, Lupski JR, Heju Z, Greenberg F, Killian JM, Gray BA, Driscoll DJ,Patel PI, Zackowski JL. Clinical, cytogenetic, and molecular evidence for aninfant with Smith-Magenis syndrome born from a mother having a mosaic 17p11.2p12 deletion. Am J Med Genet. 1993 Sep 15;47(4):504-11.
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