نتایج جستجو برای: foxp2

تعداد نتایج: 433  

2014
Paolo Devanna Jeroen Middelbeek Sonja C. Vernes

FOXP2 was the first gene shown to cause a Mendelian form of speech and language disorder. Although developmentally expressed in many organs, loss of a single copy of FOXP2 leads to a phenotype that is largely restricted to orofacial impairment during articulation and linguistic processing deficits. Why perturbed FOXP2 function affects specific aspects of the developing brain remains elusive. We...

Journal: :Scientific reports 2016
Sara B Estruch Sarah A Graham Pelagia Deriziotis Simon E Fisher

Mutations affecting the transcription factor FOXP2 cause a rare form of severe speech and language disorder. Although it is clear that sufficient FOXP2 expression is crucial for normal brain development, little is known about how this transcription factor is regulated. To investigate post-translational mechanisms for FOXP2 regulation, we searched for protein interaction partners of FOXP2, and i...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2015
Jonathan B Heston Stephanie A White

Mutations in the FOXP2 transcription factor cause an inherited speech and language disorder, but how FoxP2 contributes to learning of these vocal communication signals remains unclear. FoxP2 is enriched in corticostriatal circuits of both human and songbird brains. Experimental knockdown of this enrichment in song control neurons of the zebra finch basal ganglia impairs tutor song imitation, in...

2016
Sandra Rodriguez-Perales Paloma Garcia-Bellido

Mutations in the coding region of the FOXP2 transcriptor factor gene are known to cause speech and language impairment. Chromosomal rearrangements with breakpoints downstream the gene have been hypothesised to impair speech and cognitive abilities via physical separation of distant regulatory DNA elements. In this study, we used highly efficient targeted chromosomal deletions induced by the CRI...

2016
Frédérique J. Liégeois Michael S. Hildebrand Alexandra Bonthrone Samantha J. Turner Ingrid E. Scheffer Melanie Bahlo Alan Connelly Angela T. Morgan

FOXP2 is the major gene associated with severe, persistent, developmental speech and language disorders. While studies in the original family in which a FOXP2 mutation was found showed volume reduction and reduced activation in core language and speech networks, there have been no imaging studies of different FOXP2 mutations. We conducted a multimodal MRI study in an eight-year-old boy (A-II) w...

Journal: :Current opinion in neurobiology 2014
Sandra Wohlgemuth Iris Adam Constance Scharff

Humans with mutations in the transcription factor FOXP2 display a severe speech disorder. Songbirds are a powerful model system to study FoxP2. Like humans, songbirds communicate via vocalizations that are imitatively learned during critical periods and this learning is influenced by social factors and relies on functionally lateralized neural circuits. During the past five years significant pr...

2016
Gregg A. Castellucci Matthew J. McGinley David A. McCormick

The FOXP2 gene is important for the development of proper speech motor control in humans. However, the role of the gene in general vocal behavior in other mammals, including mice, is unclear. Here, we track the vocal development of Foxp2 heterozygous knockout (Foxp2+/-) mice and their wildtype (WT) littermates from juvenile to adult ages, and observe severe abnormalities in the courtship song o...

2016
Gregg A. Castellucci Matthew J. McGinley David A. McCormick

The FOXP2 gene is important for the development of proper speech motor control in humans. However, the role of the gene in general vocal behavior in other mammals, including mice, is unclear. Here, we track the vocal development of Foxp2 heterozygous knockout (Foxp2+/−) mice and their wildtype (WT) littermates from juvenile to adult ages, and observe severe abnormalities in the courtship song o...

Journal: :Journal of neurophysiology 2008
Julie E Miller Elizabeth Spiteri Michael C Condro Ryan T Dosumu-Johnson Daniel H Geschwind Stephanie A White

Cognitive and motor deficits associated with language and speech are seen in humans harboring FOXP2 mutations. The neural bases for FOXP2 mutation-related deficits are thought to reside in structural abnormalities distributed across systems important for language and motor learning including the cerebral cortex, basal ganglia, and cerebellum. In these brain regions, our prior research showed th...

2010
Ikuko Teramitsu Amy Poopatanapong Salvatore Torrisi Stephanie A. White

BACKGROUND Mutations in the FOXP2 transcription factor lead to language disorders with developmental onset. Accompanying structural abnormalities in cortico-striatal circuitry indicate that at least a portion of the behavioral phenotype is due to organizational deficits. We previously found parallel FoxP2 expression patterns in human and songbird cortico/pallio-striatal circuits important for l...

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