Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:3.4.21.4 (trypsin)
42,187 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The objective of this study was to evaluate the clinical, radiological investigation profiles, and ciliary function and ultrastructure in Chinese patients with Kartagener's syndrome (presence of dextrocardia, sinusitis and bronchiectasis). All patients with dextrocardia were assessed for the presence of sinusitis and bronchiectasis in our hospital network. Patients identified with Kartagener's were assessed when they were at steady state for their bronchiectasis. Seven cases (4 males; mean age 34.9 years) were identified and systematically reviewed. The mean 24 h sputum volume was 26.6 +/- 32.77 mL/day and the patients suffered from a mean of 2.9 exacerbations/year. Nasal symptoms (anosmia in one, obstruction in six and persistent discharge in three patients) were common. Only two cases (1 M) were married and both had normal fertility. Lung function assessment showed a mean FEV1/FVC of 83.3 +/- 38.78/86.5 +/- 36.72 (% predicted) with little reversibility. High resolution computerized tomography (HRCT) revealed bronchiectactic involvement of the lower lobes in seven and middle lobe/lingula in four cases. Assessment of alpha-1-anti-trypsin, aspergillus precipitins, auto-antibodies and serology for Pseudomonas pseudomallei was normal. Sputum culture yielded Pseudomonas aeruginosa in three, Haemophilus influenzae in three and commensals in one case. Phase contrast microscopy assessment of respiratory cilia, obtained by brushing the inferior turbinate, revealed that most of the mucosa was unciliated. The mean ciliary beat frequency was 5.2 +/- 6.76 Hz (range 0-13.7; normal range 12-18 Hz). Four patients had immotile cilia whilst the rest had normal ciliary movement. Transmission electron microscopy showed the absence of dynein arms in four patients. The results of this study show that patients with Kartagener's syndrome may have normal ciliary ultrastructure and the absence of dynein arms is not necessarily associated with ciliary immotility. The presence of ciliary immotility might have prognostic value as these patients appear to have more active bronchiectasis. Our experience on this series should help clinicians in the investigation and management of these patients.
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PMID:Kartagener's syndrome: a re-visit with Chinese perspectives. 969 19

Kallmann syndrome (KS) is a developmental disease that expresses in patients as hypogonadotropic hypogonadism and anosmia. KS is commonly associated with mutations in the extracellular D2 domain of the fibroblast growth factor receptor (FGFR). In this study, for the first time, the molecular basis for the FGFR associated KS mutation (A168S) is elucidated using a variety of biophysical experiments, including multidimensional NMR spectroscopy. Secondary and tertiary structural analysis using far UV circular dichroism, fluorescence and limited trypsin digestion assays suggest that the KS mutation induces subtle tertiary structure change in the D2 domain of FGFR. Results of isothermal titration calorimetry experiments show the KS mutation causes a 10-fold decrease in heparin binding affinity and also a complete loss in ligand (FGF-1) binding. (1)H-(15)N chemical perturbation data suggest that complete loss in the ligand (FGF) binding affinity is triggered by a subtle conformational change that disrupts crucial structural interactions in both the heparin and the FGF binding sites in the D2 domain of FGFR. The novel findings reported in this study are expected to provide valuable clues toward a complete understanding of the other genetic diseases linked to mutations in the FGFR.
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PMID:Molecular basis for the Kallmann syndrome-linked fibroblast growth factor receptor mutation. 2284 57