Portal:SkeletalDysplasia
From WikiPathways
Welcome to the Skeletal Dysplasia Portal
This portal was initiated by Prof Andreas Zankl at the University of Sydney. Our goal is to create Wikipathways diagrams for all known skeletal dysplasia genes. Skeletal dysplasias are rare genetic disorders affecting the development and normal function of the skeleton. They are typically caused by genetic variants in a single gene, causing abnormal function of that particular gene. As such, skeletal dysplasias allow us to study the effect of abnormal function of a particular gene on skeletal development. Skeletal dysplasias occur as spontanous mutations in humans, but also in cats, dogs, mice and other animals. In addition, mouse models that carry mutations found in human patients have been created to study the functional consequences of these mutations in more detail. There are 461 different skeletal dysplasias and pathogenic variants in 437 different genes have been identified in 425 of these 461 disorders (PMID:31633310). We thus know the genetic basis for over 90% of all skeletal dysplasias. However, we are only beginning to understand what these genes do, how they interact and how mutations in these genes lead to the extreme skeletal phenotypes that we observe in patients with skeletal dysplasias. By curating the world's knowledge about these genes and the disorders they cause, we hope to arrive at a systems level understanding of skeletal biology, seen through the lens of skeletal dysplasias. The pathway diagrams listed below cover over 100 skeletal dysplasia genes, about 25% of the total number of known skeletal dysplasia genes. Please help us cover the rest! |
Skeletal Dysplasia Pathways Collection
Completed Pathways
- FGF23 signalling in Hypophosphatemic rickets (Homo sapiens)
- MED and Pseudoachondroplasia genes (Homo sapiens)
- Type I collagen synthesis in the context of Osteogenesis imperfecta (Homo sapiens)
- Autosomal recessive Osteopetrosis pathways (Homo sapiens)
- Osteoblast differentiation (Homo sapiens)
- Somitogenesis in the context of spondylocostal dysostosis (Homo sapiens)
- Proteoglycan biosynthesis (Homo sapiens)
- FGFR3 signalling in chondrocyte proliferation and terminal differentiation (Homo sapiens)
- Glycosaminoglycan degradation (Homo sapiens)
- Cholesterol Biosynthesis with Skeletal Dysplasias (Homo sapiens)
- Endochondral Ossification with Skeletal Dysplasias (Homo sapiens)
- TGF-beta Receptor Signaling (Homo sapiens)
- Ciliopathies (Homo sapiens)
Get Involved!!
You are invited to test and curate existing pathways as well as to create new ones. All suggestions and contributions are welcome.
How do I do that?
- WikiPathways Overview and Tutorials
- Learning resources Video Tour, WikiPathways Academy or New Contributor Quickstart
- General help pages
Contact us
- Contact Prof Andreas Zankl if you interested in adding pathways to the Skeletal Dysplasia Portal.
- Send general questions about WikiPathways to the wikipathways-discuss mailing list.
Featured Pathway
FGF23 signaling in hypophosphatemic rickets and related disorders (Homo sapiens)
View all Featured Pathways for this Portal
Contributors
- Prof Andreas Zankl (portal maintainer)
- Ritchie Lee
- Kristina Hanspers