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May spina bifida result from an X-linked defect in a selective abortion mechanism?

12

Citations

29

References

1979

Year

Abstract

It is suggested that the major genetic factor in determining the birth of children with neural tube defects may be a single X-linked gene. It acts as an X-linked dominant, not by producing neural tube defects, but by enabling the affected fetus to survive selective spontaneous abortion. This mechanism, mediated at the deciduoplacental junction, may be under the control of both maternal and fetal genes. With more mutant alleles, survival would become more likely, reaching a maximum in the homozygous affected female fetus of a homozygous affected mother. The female excess in anancephaly is greater than that in spina bifida because of its prenatal severity, thus requiring relatively more mutant alleles for survival.

References

YearCitations

1971

289

1966

229

1973

204

1976

203

1974

150

1976

112

1968

105

1975

100

1971

95

1972

85

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