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Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Target Concepts:
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Enzyme
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Query: EC:2.4.2.8 (
hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
)
2,527
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An epidemiological survey of
Lesch-Nyhan
(L-N) syndrome in Japan was carried out. In the first survey, questionnaires were mailed to the pediatric departments of the university hospitals, homes for mentally retarded children, and city and county medical associations. This study disclosed 41 patients with L-N syndrome and 48 with suspected L-N syndrome. In the second survey, questionnaires were mailed to the institutes that reported cases or suspected cases of L-N syndrome. In 29 of these cases,
hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
HPRT
) activity in the patients' erythrocytes was measured. Three cases were confirmed to be L-N syndrome in this study. Among the other confirmed cases, the activities of
HPRT
had already been determined in 23 cases. In addition to these cases, 10 cases have been reported in the literature, and 16 cases were considered to be with L-N syndrome from their typical clinical features without any determination of
HPRT
activity.
...
PMID:Lesch-Nyhan syndrome in Japan. 359 93
Ten cases of
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
have been followed for 3-19 years (mean, 11 years and four months). Criteria of
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
were restricted to the following: complete absence of
hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
HPRT
) in hemolysate and fibroblast, spasticity, choreoathetosis, mental retardation, self-mutilation, and occurrence in males. Two patients have died of pneumonia and two died suddenly. However, autopsies produced no positive findings. Hyperuricemia has been controlled by benzbromarone in nine patients. One patient did not take any medical treatment and died suddenly when he was 19 years old, but showed no gouty signs. Patients with
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
indicated no change or aggravation of choreoathetosis or spasticity. Self-mutilation was difficult to control by any treatment with continuing effect. After the age of ten, self-mutilation declined in seven cases, and in one patient disappeared completely. Mental delay was remarkable and suspected developmental age (DA) was 7 months - four years and 10 months (chronological age, 7 years and five months - 19 years and 6 months). Mean DQ score was 15.6. Physical development was severely delayed, and weight age was 28.9-46.4%, mean 37.4% of chronological age. Future investigations will evolve clarification of CNS signs and its treatment, and etiological research of sudden death.
...
PMID:Long-term follow-up of ten patients with Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. 376 72
Simple methods for the detection of
hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
and/or adenine phosphoribosyltransferase deficiencies using dried filter paper blood spots were studied. Enzyme activities in the eluate from dried filter paper blood spots stored for 4 weeks at room conditions were shown to be quite stable. Autoradiographs prepared from dried filter paper blood spots and DE-81 papers soaked with enzyme reaction mixtures containing 14C-hypoxanthine and/or 14C-adenine showed sharp radioactive spots in normal subjects. No activity was evident in the cases of the
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
and/or adenine phosphoribosyltransferase deficiency. The methods seem to be suitable for screening.
...
PMID:Simple screening methods for hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase and adenine phosphoribosyltransferase deficiencies using dried blood spots on filter paper. 376 88
Embryonal stem (ES) cell lines, established in culture from peri-implantation mouse blastocysts, can colonize both the somatic and germ-cell lineages of chimaeric mice following injection into host blastocysts. Recently, ES cells with multiple integrations of retroviral sequences have been used to introduce these sequences into the germ-line of chimaeric mice, demonstrating an alternative to the microinjection of fertilized eggs for the production of transgenic mice. However, the properties of ES cells raise a unique possibility: that of using the techniques of somatic cell genetics to select cells with genetic modifications such as recessive mutations, and of introducing these mutations into the mouse germ line. Here we report the realization of this possibility by the selection in vitro of variant ES cells deficient in hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (
HPRT
;
EC 2.4.2.8
), their use to produce germline chimaeras resulting in female offspring heterozygous for
HPRT
-deficiency, and the generation of
HPRT
-deficient preimplantation embryos from these females. In human males,
HPRT
deficiency causes
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
, which is characterized by mental retardation and self-mutilation.
...
PMID:HPRT-deficient (Lesch-Nyhan) mouse embryos derived from germline colonization by cultured cells. 382 5
Peripheral T cells from 3
Lesch-Nyhan
patients, 3 normal subjects, and 3 brothers with
hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HGPRT) deficiency
but without
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
(so-called partial deficiency) have been analyzed. Although these brothers contained
HGPRT
activities neither in the hemolysates nor in the T cell extracts at levels detectable by the regular radioenzyme assay, the enzyme deficiency had not caused any typical neurological symptoms of the
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
. Although the T cells from these brothers were at least 10-fold more resistant to 6-thioguanine than normal T cells, they were more than 30-fold less resistant than the T cells from 3
Lesch-Nyhan
patients indicating that there is a clear difference in the severity of the enzyme deficiency between the brothers and the
Lesch-Nyhan
patients. These data indicate that the long-term T cell culture in the medium containing a purine analog whose toxicity depends on a salvaging enzyme is useful for evaluating the severity of the enzyme deficiency in viable cells.
...
PMID:Evaluation of the severity of hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase deficiency using viable T cells. 387 77
An inherited complete deficiency of
hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
in male children is associated with a severe neurological disorder characterized by chloroform and athetoid movements, hypertonicity, mental retardation, and self-injurious behavior. In the review that follows several possible mechanisms by which the enzyme defect may cause the CNS disorder are discussed. Current evidence suggests that the primary neural deficit in the
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
is a deficiency of dopamine in the basal ganglia. It is argued that this neurochemical lesion results from a deficiency of purine nucleotides which impairs arborization of nigrostriatal neurons during perinatal development. Differences in the ontogenetic timing of the neurochemical lesion may be partly responsible for the different neurological symptoms displayed by persons afflicted with the
Lesch-Nyhan
and Parkinson's syndromes.
...
PMID:The biochemical basis of the behavioral disorder in the Lesch-Nyhan syndrome. 392 93
The prenatal detection of
hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase
(
HPRT
,
EC 2.4.2.8
) deficiency, the
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
, during the first trimester of an affected pregnancy through the use of chorionic villus sampling is reported. Quantitation of reaction products formed by villus cell extracts from exogenous hypoxanthine-8-[14C] or adenine-8-[14C] is used in diagnosis. We report the diagnosis of
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
using a chorionic villus specimen and confirmation of that diagnosis. In addition, adenosine deaminase (ADA) and purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP), enzymes deficient in inherited immune disorders, are detected in chorionic villus samples. These heritable disorders also appear amenable to early prenatal diagnosis.
...
PMID:First trimester diagnosis of Lesch-Nyhan syndrome: applications to other disorders of purine metabolism. 392 83
We report a case of urate overproduction owing to the
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
(deficiency of
hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase
). Urate crystalluria was controlled by allopurinol therapy but renal calculi developed, which contained a variety of purines, particularly the relatively insoluble xanthine, as well as oxypurinol and hypoxanthine. The potential hazard from the increased amounts of xanthine that are produced during allopurinol therapy for urate overproduction is stressed, as well as the importance of maintaining a high urine flow rate even during such therapy.
...
PMID:Xanthine-containing calculi during allopurinol therapy. 398 18
IMP:pyrophosphate phosphoribosyltransferase (IPPase) (
EC 2.4.2.8
) has been purified over 7000-fold from human erythrocytes. The purified enzyme moved as a single band on disc electrophoresis. Antisera prepared in rabbits and rats against the purified enzyme precipitated and neutralized the enzyme, but had no effect on AMP-pyrophosphate phosphoribosyltransferase (EC 2.4.2.7) activity. Evidence was found for isozymes (enzyme variants) of IPPase in normal erythrocytes. Erythrocyte lysates of five patients with
Lesch-Nyhan disease
reacted with antisera against normal IPPase. Lysates from LN erythrocytes blocked the inactivation of normal enzyme by the antibody. LN erythrocytes had about the same concentration of enzyme protein as normal erythrocytes. The genetic defect in LN results in the production of essentially normal amounts of an immunologically identifiable but catalytically incompetent enzyme. Thus LN is apparently the result of a mutation in a structural gene and is not due to deletion of a structural gene or defect in a regulatory gene.
...
PMID:Purification of IMP:pyrophosphate phosphoribosyltransferases, catalytically incompetent enzymes in Lesch-Nyhan disease. 432 3
Deficient hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase (HGPRT;
EC 2.4.2.8
) enzymes from erythrocytes of patients with hyperuricemia and with the
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
migrate 15% faster in polyacrylamide gel disc electrophoresis than the normal enzyme. A half-sister of two males with partial deficiency, who had 34% of normal HGPRT activity in her erythrocytes, yielded profiles containing two distinct zones of activity; one corresponded to the enzyme found in normal individuals and one to the variant of her half-brothers. However, in her profile her variant enzyme showed notably greater activity than that observed in her half-brothers. This increase was due to an activation of the variant by normal enzyme. Electrophoresis of mixtures of normal enzyme with partially deficient enzymes from patients with hyperuricemia and with the
Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
also led to activation of deficient HGPRT variants by normal enzymes. Deficient variants were also activated by normal enzyme on filtration through Sephadex G-25. Experiments in which deficient variant enzymes were activated with purified normal enzyme labeled with (125)I indicated that deficient enzymes incorporate components of the normal enzyme. No such activation of deficient enzymes was ever obtained when mixtures of deficient and normal enzymes were put together in a test tube.
...
PMID:Activation of variants of hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyl transferase by the normal enzyme. 434 98
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