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    • John M Opitz
    • John M Opitz

      John M Opitz

      Department of Human Genetics, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah | Department of Pathology, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, ...

       

       

      KOL Resume for John M Opitz

      Year
      2019

      Department of Human Genetics, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah

      2018

      Pediatrics Medical Genetics, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA

      2017

      Pediatrics (Medical Genetics), Pediatric Pathology, Human Genetics, Obstetrics, and Gynecology, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah 84132.

      2016

      Department of Pediatrics (Medical Genetics) School of Medicine University of Utah Salt Lake City Utah

      2015

      Departments of Pediatrics (Medical Genetics), Human Genetics, Pathology, Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Utah School of Medicine Salt Lake City, Utah.

      Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT 84108, USA

      University of Utah School of Medicine Pediatrics Salt Lake City Utah

      2014

      Correspondence to: John M. Opitz, M.D., Medical Genetics, University of Utah, 419 Wakara Way, Suite 213, Salt Lake City, UT 84108

      John M. Opitz—Born: 8/15/1935, Hamburg, Germany. Emigrated to USA: 1950; Naturalized citizen. Completed Medical School and two post-graduate years at SUI, Iowa City in 1961. Undergraduate mentor: Emil Witschi; notable medical school mentors: Jacqueline A. Noonan and Hans Zellweger. Was house-officer, post-doctoral fellow (K. Patau, D.W. Smith) and faculty member in Pediatric/Medical Genetics, 1961–1979, University of Wisconsin, Madison. Worked at Shodair Hospital, Helena, Montana for 18 years with adjunct appointment at MSU Bozeman in medicine (WAMI Program) and in other departments. Now he is completing his 18th year at the University of Utah, Department of Pediatrics (Medical Genetics), adjunct: Human Genetics, OB-GYN, Pathology (Pediatric Pathology PCH). Dr. Opitz is primarily known for his work on X-linked mental retardation, malformation syndromes, on the causes of abnormal development, and on the relationship between evolution and development

      2013

      University of Utah Division of Medical Genetics, Human Genetics, Pathology, Obstetrics and Gynecology Salt Lake City, Utah

      Shodair Children's Hospital Helena MT

      2012

      American Journal of Medical Genetics, University of Utah, 419 Wakara Way, Ste 213, Salt Lake City, UT 84108

      Departments of Pediatrics (Medical Genetics), Human Genetics, Pathology, Obstetrics & Gynecology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah

      2011

      Eccles Institute of Human Genetics, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, USA

      Pediatrics (Medical Genetics), Human Genetics, Obstetrics and Gynecology, School of Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah

      Division of Medical Genetics, 2C412 SOM, 50 N. Mario Capecchi Drive, Salt Lake City, UT, 84132

      2010

      University of Utah Health Sciences Center, Salt Lake City, Utah

      2009

      Departments of Pediatrics (Medical Genetics), Pathology, Obstetrics and Gynecology, and Human Genetics, University of Utah Health Sciences Center, School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah

      2008

      Pediatrics (Division of Medical Genetics), Pathology, Human Genetics, Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah

      2007

      Division of Medical Genetics, University of Utah Health Sciences Center, 50 North Medical Drive, 2C412 SOM, Salt Lake City, UT 84132

      Professor of Pediatrics, Pathology, Human Genetics, and Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah

      2006

      University of Utah School of Medicine

      2C412 SOM, 50 N. Medical Drive, Salt Lake City, UT 84109

      2005

      2C412 SOM, University of Utah, 50 N. Medical Drive, Salt Lake City, UT 84132.

      University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah

      2004

      Departments of Pediatrics, Human Genetics, Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah

       

       

      John M Opitz: Influence Statistics

      Sample of concepts for which John M Opitz is among the top experts in the world.
      Concept World rank
      duplication 16p human #1
      brazilan child #1
      structures hypothesis #1
      preauricular pits #1
      human triploidy #1
      prune belly anencephaly #1
      cochin jews jews #1
      sternal malformation #1
      bbb syndromes #1
      congenital diaphragmatic defects #1
      awadi #1
      new x‐linked #1
      friedrich meckel younger #1
      dominantly inherited syndrome #1
      clavicular defect #1
      fra10q25 leukocytes #1
      14q31 #1
      brachmannde lange syndrome #1
      blaschkolinear #1
      martin‐bell syndrome #1
      incidence mental retardation #1
      cystic dysplasia kidneys #1
      structures mfd #1
      differential diagnosis ppsh #1
      normal male carriers #1
      dubowitz microcephaly #1
      congenital male #1
      cytogenetics female #1
      xlinked recessive inheritance #1
      phenotype‐karyotype correlations #1
      unusually symmetrical form #1
      congenital perineal hernia #1
      characteristic appearance #1
      disorders congenital #1
      wiedemann beckwith #1
      publication female genes #1
      palagonia #1
      fg syndromes #1
      tibial aplasia‐ectrodactyly #1
      normal electrophoretic patterns #1
      lipoprotein immunogenetics #1
      rubinstein‐taybi #1
      campomelia #1
      sex chromosome aberrations #1
      dup17q #1
      pyrimidine‐rich sequences #1
      smith‐lemli‐opitz rsh #1
      genetic follow‐up study #1
      laterality sequence #1
      tethered cord “syndrome #1

       

      Prominent publications by John M Opitz

      KOL-Index: 17049

      Perrault syndrome is a recessive disorder characterized by ovarian dysgenesis in females, sensorineural deafness in both males and females, and in some patients, neurological manifestations. No genes for Perrault syndrome have heretofore been identified. A small family of mixed European ancestry includes two sisters with well-characterized Perrault syndrome. Whole-exome sequencing of genomic DNA from one of these sisters revealed exactly one gene with two rare functional variants: ...

      Known for Perrault Syndrome | Ovarian Dysgenesis | Hearing Loss | Dbp Deficiency | Mutations Hsd17b4
      KOL-Index: 14312

      Perrault syndrome is a genetically heterogeneous recessive disorder characterized by ovarian dysgenesis and sensorineural hearing loss. In a nonconsanguineous family with five affected siblings, linkage analysis and genomic sequencing revealed the genetic basis of Perrault syndrome to be compound heterozygosity for mutations in the mitochondrial histidyl tRNA synthetase HARS2 at two highly conserved amino acids, L200V and V368L. The nucleotide substitution creating HARS2 p.L200V also ...

      Known for Perrault Syndrome | Hearing Loss | Trna Synthetase | Gonadal Dysgenesis | Mitochondrial Histidyl
      KOL-Index: 11389

      Creatine kinase (CK) activity and hemopexin concentration were measured in 208 serum samples from 104 normal females and 22 obligate carriers of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) 20-40 years old. Logistic discrimination was used to assess the effectiveness of the parameters alone or in combination in identifying DMD carriers. In this approach, a serum sample with particular CK, hemopexin, or a combination of CK and hemopexin values is given a probability that if drawn at random from a ...

      Known for Creatine Kinase | Logistic Discrimination | Carrier Detection | Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy | Ck Hemopexin
      KOL-Index: 11194

      We reviewed etiologic and phenotypic aspects of those orofacial and limb anomalies usually diagnosed as Hanhart syndrome and Möbius syndrome, but also those described, among others, under names such as aglossia-adactylia syndrome, glosso-palatine ankylosis, ankyloglossia superior, peromelia and micrognathia, cleft palate/lateral synechiae syndrome, and the Charlie M. syndrome. By coding the degree of severity of the limb defects it was possible to compare these cases quantitatively and ...

      Known for Möbius Syndrome | Cranial Nerve Palsies | Poland Anomaly | Nerve Abnormalities | Limb Defects
      KOL-Index: 11137

      We have studied 4 patients with inverted tandem duplications of parts of chromosomes, a hitherto rarely identified form of a structural rearrangement involving a single chromosome in man. In patients 1 and 2, the duplication involved parts of the short arm of chromosome 8 (regions 8p12 leads to 8p23 and 8p21 leads to 8p23, respectively). Both patients manifested certain characteristics of the mosaic trisomy 8 syndrome. Elevated levels of glutathione reductase (GSR) in their erythrocytes ...

      Known for Human Chromosomes | Inverted Tandem | Glutathione Reductase | Patients Duplication | Distal 4q
      KOL-Index: 11051

      Although the autosomal recessive disease Chediak-Higashi syndrome (CHS) has been described in humans, cats, mink, cattle, mice, killer whales, blue foxes, and silver foxes, and these conditions appear quite similar, no direct evidence of the homology of this disease in the various species has been presented. To determine if CHS in humans, cats, mink, cattle, and mice is due to a mutant gene at the homologous genetic locus in each species, or alternatively, if these are merely similar ...

      Known for Genetic Complementation | Chediak‐higashi Syndrome | Human Chs | Fibroblasts Species | Autosomal Recessive Disease
      KOL-Index: 10909

      The effect of FUdR on the expression of fra(X)(q27) was examined in lymphocytes and/or fibroblasts from 16 affected males and 5 carriers from 10 families; six different culture media were used: F10, 5% serum, pH 7.3(37 degrees C); medium 199, 5% serum, pH 7.6(37 degrees C); folate-free 199, 5% serum, pH 7.6(37 degrees C), and these three media with FUdR (0.05 micron). In lymphocytes there was no significant difference in the percentage of fra(X) expressing cells between any of the ...

      Known for Fudr Expression | X‐linked Mental Retardation | Sex Chromosome | Culture Media | Prenatal Diagnosis
      KOL-Index: 10760

      We reviewed 45 patients with a deletion of the long arm of chromosome 4. Forty-one were previous reports (25 terminal deletions and 16 interstitial deletions) and 4 are new cases with terminal deletions. Of the 29 patients with terminal deletions, 18 with deletion at 4q31 and 4 at 4q32----qter had an identifiable phenotype consisting of abnormal skull shape, hypertelorism, cleft palate, apparently low-set abnormal pinnae, short nose with abnormal bridge, virtually pathognomonic pointed ...

      Known for Terminal Deletions | Long Arm | Chromosome 4 | Patients Deletion | Human Pair
      KOL-Index: 10139

      The period in which Jews were first associated with Cochin and the Malabar coast was by tradition, after the destruction of the First Temple (586 BCE). Yet, the earliest evidence of Jewish settlements is from the tenth century CE. The largest group of Cochin Jews are the "Black Jews," of whom about 4,000 live in Israel. A high frequency of consanguineous marriages prevailed among Cochin Jews. Their mean height and weight were low when they came to Israel in 1954; an increase in both was ...

      Known for Cochin Jews | Genetic Studies | Blood Groups | Hla Antigens | Allele Frequencies
      KOL-Index: 10134

      Recent advances in molecular biology provide measures of genotypes at loci involved in lipid metabolism. Genotypes for apolipoprotein E (apo E) and quantitative levels of total plasma cholesterol, betalipoprotein, and triglycerides were measured in a sample of 223 unrelated individuals from Nancy, France. The frequencies of the epsilon 2, epsilon 3, and epsilon 4 alleles are 0.13, 0.74, and 0.13, respectively, in this sample. Significant differences among apo E genotypes were detected ...

      Known for Measured Genotype | Unrelated Individuals | Cholesterol Triglycerides | Epsilon 2 Allele | Lipid Metabolism
      KOL-Index: 9887

      Meier–Gorlin syndrome (MGS) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by microtia, patellar aplasia/hypoplasia, and short stature. Recently, mutations in five genes from the pre-replication complex (ORC1, ORC4, ORC6, CDT1, and CDC6), crucial in cell-cycle progression and growth, were identified in individuals with MGS. Here, we report on genotype–phenotype studies in 45 individuals with MGS (27 females, 18 males; age 3 months–47 years). Thirty-five individuals had biallelic ...

      Known for Gorlin Syndrome | Short Stature | Replication Complex | Molecular Diagnosis | Orc1 Mutations
      KOL-Index: 9865

      Opitz and Kaveggia [Opitz and Kaveggia (1974); Z Kinderheilk 117:1-18] reported on a family of five affected males with distinctive facial appearance, mental retardation, macrocephaly, imperforate anus and hypotonia. Risheg et al. [Risheg et al. (2007); Nat Genet 39:451-453] identified an identical mutation (p.R961W) in MED12 in six families with Opitz-Kaveggia syndrome, including a surviving affected man from the family reported in 1974. The previously defined behavior phenotype of ...

      Known for Fg Syndrome | Med12 Gene | R961w Mutation | Opitz Kaveggia | Mental Retardation
      KOL-Index: 9595

      Acute maternal ethanl (alcohol) administration induces different craniofacial anomalies in the offspring of experimental animals, depending on the gestational day of teratogen exposure. Previous studies in our laboratories have illustrated the sequence of developmental changes leading to the "typical" fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) craniofacial phenotype which results from teratogen exposure during gastrulation. These facial features are accompanied by deficiencies in median forebrain ...

      Known for Digeorge Anomaly | Animal Model | Fetal Alcohol | Ethanol Exposure | Craniofacial Malformations
      KOL-Index: 9183

      Three unrelated stillborn infants (cases 1-3) are presented here with a distinct constellation of multiple anomalies: namely, multiple pterygia involving chin-to-sternum, cervical, axillary, antecubital, crural and/or popliteal areas, flexion contractures of multiple joints, small chest, hydrops, characteristic abnormal facial appearance with hypertelorism, markedly flattened nasal bridge with hypoplastic nasal alae, cleft palate, micrognathia, apparently low-set malformed ears, short ...

      Known for Cystic Hygroma | Multiple Pterygia | Facial Anomalies | Pterygium Syndrome | Cleft Palate

      Key People For Publication Abnormalities

      Top KOLs in the world
      #1
      John M Opitz
      publication abnormalities rett syndrome prenatal diagnosis
      #2
      Jean‐Pierre Fryns
      mental retardation human pair publication abnormalities
      #3
      James F Reynolds
      rett syndrome prenatal diagnosis publication abnormalities
      #4
      Elaine H Zackai
      human pair deletion syndrome situ hybridization
      #5
      David W Smith
      fetal alcohol syndrome publication abnormalities congenital hypothyroidism
      #6
      James F Reynolds
      rett syndrome prenatal diagnosis publication abnormalities

      John M Opitz:Expert Impact

      Concepts for whichJohn M Opitzhas direct influence:Publication abnormalities,  Rett syndrome,  Prenatal diagnosis,  Mental retardation,  Genetic counseling,  Female genes,  Chromosomes human,  Fg syndrome.

      John M Opitz:KOL impact

      Concepts related to the work of other authors for whichfor which John M Opitz has influence:Rett syndrome,  Prenatal diagnosis,  Human pair,  Mental retardation,  Situ hybridization,  Publication abnormalities,  Intellectual disability.


       

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      Department of Human Genetics, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah | Department of Pathology, University of Utah School of Medicine, Salt Lake City, Utah | Division of Medical Genetics, Department of Pediatrics, University of U

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