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These sources provide a comprehensive examination of Meckel-Gruber syndrome (MKS), a rare and fatal autosomal recessive genetic disorder categorized as a ciliopathy. The collected research highlights how defects in the primary cilium—a sensory organelle—lead to a classic diagnostic triad of cystic kidney disease, central nervous system malformations, and polydactyly. Scientific papers within the text discuss the identification of causative genes such as TXNDC15 and MKS1, alongside the development of CRISPR-Cas9 mouse models and human iPSC-derived organoidsto study disease mechanisms. Authors also explore the broader biological context of ciliary specialization, explaining why mutations in shared ciliary proteins can result in diverse clinical outcomes across different tissues. Finally, the texts review the lethal prognosis of the syndrome, its high prevalence in certain populations like the Finnish, and the current reliance on prenatal ultrasound for early diagnosis.
By Robin Hendel, MDThese sources provide a comprehensive examination of Meckel-Gruber syndrome (MKS), a rare and fatal autosomal recessive genetic disorder categorized as a ciliopathy. The collected research highlights how defects in the primary cilium—a sensory organelle—lead to a classic diagnostic triad of cystic kidney disease, central nervous system malformations, and polydactyly. Scientific papers within the text discuss the identification of causative genes such as TXNDC15 and MKS1, alongside the development of CRISPR-Cas9 mouse models and human iPSC-derived organoidsto study disease mechanisms. Authors also explore the broader biological context of ciliary specialization, explaining why mutations in shared ciliary proteins can result in diverse clinical outcomes across different tissues. Finally, the texts review the lethal prognosis of the syndrome, its high prevalence in certain populations like the Finnish, and the current reliance on prenatal ultrasound for early diagnosis.