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Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS logoLink to Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
. 2006 Jun 30;63(16):1867–1875. doi: 10.1007/s00018-005-5553-x

The neurobiology of Williams syndrome: Cascading influences of visual system impairment?

M A Eckert 1,, A M Galaburda 2, D L Mills 3, U Bellugi 4, J R Korenberg 5, A L Reiss 6
PMCID: PMC11136340  PMID: 16810457

Abstract.

Williams syndrome (WS) is characterized by a unique pattern of cognitive, behavioral, and neurobiological findings that stem from a microdeletion of genes on chromosome 7. Visuospatial ability is particularly affected in WS and neurobiological studies of WS demonstrate atypical function and structure in posterior parietal, thalamic, and cerebellar regions that are important for performing space-based actions. This review summarizes the neurobiological findings in WS, and, based on these findings, we suggest that people with WS have a primary impairment in neural systems that support the performance of space-based actions. We also examine the question of whether impaired development of visual systems could affect the development of atypical social-emotional and language function in people with WS. Finally, we propose developmental explanations for the visual system impairments in WS. While hemizygosity for the transcription factor II-I gene family probably affects the development of visual systems, we also suggest that Lim-kinase 1 hemizygosity exacerbates the impairments in performing space-based actions.

Keywords. Williams syndrome, visuospatial, visual spatial, dorsal stream hypothesis, LIMK1, pulvinar

Footnotes

Received 17 November 2005; received after revision 16 February 2006; accepted 4 May 2006


Articles from Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS are provided here courtesy of Springer

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