Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.1.3.1 (alkaline phosphatase)
47,916 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of adult hypophosphatasia under treatment with a high orthophosphate (P1) intake is described. The patient is a 53-year-old woman. Her symptoms have progressed for seven years, and it has been necessary to perform osteosynthesis of both crura. The diagnosis rests upon a characteristic clinical picture, low serum alkaline phosphatase activity, high urinary excretion of phosphoethanolamine, and an invariably elevated concentration of inorganic pyrophosphate (PP1) in plasma accompanied by a very high excretion of this compound in the urine. An improved technique allowed specific determinations of microquantities of PP1 in biologic materials. The concentrations of PP1 in the plasma and urine remained unchanged when the patient's intake of phosphorus was increased to 1.98 g/day. The PP1/P1 ratio in the urine was 10-20 before treatment. During treatment P1 excretion increased. PP1 excretion did not change, and the ratio decreased to around 7. The renal tubular transport of PP1 probably was saturated, and therefore PP1, which was circulating in abnormally high concentrations in the patient's fluids, could not be removed by loading with P1. Four months of treatment did not benefit the patient.
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PMID:Adult hypophosphatasia. 16 53

Skeletal abnormalities with defective formation of mature calcified bone are the most prominent clinical features of hypophosphatasia. Low concentrations of serum and tissue alkaline phosphatase and elevated plasma and urinary levels of phosphorylethanolamine (PEA) are also present. Although PEA is hydrolyzed by serum alkaline phosphatase, the relationship between PEA and the deficiency is unclear. PEA has not previously been tested as a cytochemical substrate for the in situ demonstration of human alkaline phosphatase activity. We have studied alkaline phosphatase activity in hypophosphatasia in tissue sections, utilizing PEA and adenosinetriphosphate (ATP) as well as the usual beta-glycerophosphate and naphthol phosphate substrates. Neutral and acid phosphatase activities were also examined. Our results demonstrate that PEA is a substrate for the localization of alkaline phosphatase in normal human tissue, but is not hydrolyzed in hypophosphatasia in the liver, brain or costochondral junction under alkaline conditions. In the kidney in hypophosphatasia only the straight segments of proximal tubules that rim the medullary rays are reactive with PEA. Similar results in hypophosphatasia were obtained at an alkaline pH with ATP, beta-glycerophosphate, and naphthol phosphate. However, the defect in hypophosphatasia is not a generalized deficiency of membrane-associated phosphatases because membranes that were deficient in alkaline phosphatase activity demonstrated normal reactivity with ATP at neutral pH. In addition, thiamine pyrophosphate was also split by Golgi membranes within the cytoplasm. Acid hydrolysis of beta-glycerophosphate by lysosomes was normal.
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PMID:Hypophosphatasia: a cytochemical study of phosphatase activities. 18 38

Hypophosphatasia in adults is rare. Two elderly sisters presenting with pathological fractures of the femur are reported to illustrate the difficulties in orthopaedic management of this disease. All patients with a history of repeated fractures, especially from minor trauma and with generalised radiological bony abnormality, should be screened for this rare disease. A consistently low level of serum alkaline phosphatase with the presence of phosphoethanolamine in the urine is diagnostic.
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PMID:Orthopaedic problems in adult hypophosphatasia: a report of two cases. 42 40

Investigation of the kindred of a 58-year-old woman with all of the features of "adult" hypophosphatasia revealed 12 individuals in 3 generations with subnormal circulating total alkaline phosphatase (AP) activity. The pattern of inheritance suggested autosomal dominant transmission, with incomplete penetrance of the trait particularly in the young males. Hypophosphatasic individuals other than the proposita were clinically well but had loss of permanent teeth, showing that dental abnormalities could be the only clinical manifestation of the disorder. Radiographic investigation of the proposita revealed that completion of stress fractures was necessary for healing; maturation of incomplete fractures resulted in stable Looser zones. Skeletal survey and radionuclide bone imaging were unremarkable in hypophosphatasic individuals without fracture. Subclinical osteopenia was found in several affected women by metacarpal cortical width and bone densitometric measurements. Laboratory studies showed increased plasma and urinary phosphoethanolamine levels in affected individuals. Phosphoethanolamine and phosphoserine appeared to be natural subtrates for AP since a negative correlation existed between each substrate and circulating total AP activity. Phosphoethanolamine and phosphoserine levels were greatest in the clinically affected proposita; furthermore, only she showed absence of leukocyte AP activity. Heat fractionation of her total circulating AP activity suggested severe reduction in the bone isoenzyme. Hypophosphatasic children had higher levels of total circulating AP than affected adults; the increase was apparently secondary to increased bone isoenzyme. Iliac crest bone biopsies showed greater abnormality in affected women. Osteoidosis was particularly pronounced in the proposita's younger affected sister and hypophosphatasic daughter. Histomorphometric analyses of the biopsies revealed a paucity of osteoblasts despite increased quantities of unmineralized matrix. The finding that hypophosphatasic children in this kindred had higher circulating total AP activity than adults and were able to model their skeleton normally, together with observations that the bone biopsy in adults had a paucity of osteoblasts, suggests that some factor(s) during growth is able to induce both AP activity and osteoblast function, or, that this disorder is an "abiotrophy" with deficient osteoblastic formation and/or accelerated destruction in adult life.
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PMID:Adult hypophosphatasia. Clinical, laboratory, and genetic investigation of a large kindred with review of the literature. 48 Nov 94

This report has considered three approaches to the prenatal diagnosis of the severe, early onset form of hypophosphatasia. Two of these approaches, ultrasonography and the determination of the bone/liver isozymes of alkaline phosphatase (ALP) in cultured amniotic fluid cells, have proven useful diagnostically. The third method, assay of the bone/liver isozyme activity or total activity in supernatant amniotic fluid, was not informative for the affected fetus we studies. Failure to visualize a well-defined fetal skull after 16 weeks of pregnancy when the level of alpha-fetoprotein in the amniotic fluid is normal should arouse the suspicion of hypophosphatasia. Because the disease is known to manifest clinical variabiltiy, studies to detect both the biochemical defect as well as the structural manifestations should be considered. The combined use of ultrasonography, analysis of amniotic fluid alpha-fetoprotein, and the measurement of the bone/liver ALP in cultured amniotic fluid cells would appear to be the best approach to the prenatal diagnosis.
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PMID:Prenatal diagnosis of hypophosphatasia; genetic, biochemical, and clinical studies. 67 24

A case of hypophosphatasia with osteomalacia and subtrochanteric pseudo-fractures is described in a 53 years old woman. Bone biopsy showed an excess of osteoid. Alkaline phosphatase activities in sera were low. There was no excretion in the urine of abnormal quantities of phosphoetanolamine. But alkaline phosphatase activities were low in bone and intestine. Two sons were affected by biological hypophosphatasia without clinical features. These data support the diagnosis of minimal hypophosphatasia in an adult.
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PMID:[Hypophosphatasia in an adult, with late clinical manifestations (author's transl)]. 74 77

This report deals with quantitative and qualitative investigations of alkaline phosphatase in two unrelated infants with the severe infantile form of hypophosphatasia. Both affected infants had no detectable leukocyte alkaline phosphatase activities and both sets of parents and one sibling tended to have low but variable leukocyte enzyme activities. Normal duodenal juice alkaline phosphatase activity was present in the one patient in whom it was measured and a wide range of variation in enzymic activity was observed in the stools. There was no significant difference in the stool enzyme activity between both patients with hypophosphatasia (42.01 +/- 9.77 U) and control infants (40.55 +/- 6.29 U). However, the heterozygous parents had values significantly lower than the control adults (2.10 +/- 0.47 as compared with 19.10 +/- 4.44 U). Intestinal bacteria did not contribute significantly to the stool alkaline phosphatase activity. Enzyme activity was present in the bile of one of the patients and nearly absent in that of the other. Three "inducers" of alkaline phosphatase were given to both patients (phenobarbital, vitamin A, and corticosteroid). No clinical improvement or rise in serum alkaline phosphatase activity was observed during the trial of therapy with these agents. However, a significant increase in the activity of serum acid phosphatase was demonstrated during the course of vitamin A administration, suggesting an in vivo action of vitamin A on the lysosomes through decreasing the stability of the membrane and releasing acid phosphatase to the serum. Quantitative determination of tissue alkaline phosphatases from autopsy tissues was highly variable: no activity was found in bone, lungs, or spleen of either infant; there was a discrepancy in liver and kidney alkaline phosphatase values (zero in one patient and present in the other) and activity was present in the intestinal mucosa of both. Qualitative analysis of kidney, liver, and intestinal alkaline phosphatase revealed some differences between the patients and control subjects in heat inactivation and phenylalanine inhibition (Table 3). Starch gel electrophoresis of the liver preparation of one patient disclosed a single band which had greater mobility than that of six control subjects matched for age. Liver extracts from a premature and from full term newborns showed two bands. The single band of the patient's liver enzyme corresponded to the newborn's fast moving component. In addition, the intestinal enzyme prepared from the same patient had an extra band when compared with age-matched control subjects.
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PMID:Hypophosphatasia: a developmental anomaly of alkaline phosphatase? 93 30

The diagnostic characteristics of the early infantile form of hypophosphatasia tarda are demonstrated in a case of a first child of healthy, probably consanguineous, unmarried parents. The diagnosis of the disease is based on the clinical and radiographic findings. The absence of alkaline phosphatase activity in the blood serum and leukocytes, and the excretion of phosphorylethanolamine in urine confirm the diagnosis. The inheritance appears to be autosomal recessive.
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PMID:The diagnosis of the early infantile form of hypophosphatasia tarda. 115 Feb 59

The autopsy findings of two cases of infantile hypophosphatasia are described and compared with those of 16 previously reported cases. Histochemical and biochemical tissue analysis for alkaline phosphatase showed a marked decrease in activity in liver, kidney, and bones. However, intestinal alkaline phosphatase possessed normal or slightly elevated activity. Nephrocalcinosis is a frequent complication and its development depends on hypercalcemia and length of survival of the patient. Electron microscopic findings are illustrated, and a mechanism for the development of nephrocalcinosis is proposed. For the first time, marked elevations of parathyroid hormone was detected. This finding, coupled with the extreme difficulty in locating the parathyroid glands in cases of hypophosphatasia, is enigmatic. Areas for furture investigation are suggested.
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PMID:Hypophosphatasia-study on two autopsy cases. 119 30

Hypophosphatasia is an inborn error of metabolism that is characterized clinically by defective bone mineralization and biochemically by deficient activity of the tissue-nonspecific isoenzyme of alkaline phosphatase (TNSALP) in serum and in tissues. Clinical severity is extremely variable, ranging from death in utero to pathologic fractures first presenting in adulthood. Severe forms of the disease are inherited in an autosomal recessive fashion; the modes of transmission of mild forms are uncertain. Deficiency of TNSALP activity in this condition suggests that mutations in the TNSALP "candidate" gene are the primary defects. This hypothesis was supported in 1988 by the demonstration, in one inbred infant, that an identical missense mutation in both alleles of the gene encoding TNSALP caused lethal hypophosphatasia. Here we summarize the work leading to that discovery and discuss the recent identification of additional missense mutations in the TNSALP gene associated with the entire clinical spectrum of hypophosphatasia.
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PMID:Missense mutations of the tissue-nonspecific alkaline phosphatase gene in hypophosphatasia. 136 Aug 78


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