Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: EC:6.3.2.3 (
glutathione synthetase
)
678
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pyroglutamic acidemia, a rare
metabolic disorder
, usually appears in infancy. It is characterized by retardation, ataxia, hemolytic anemia, and chronic acidosis and is caused by a marked deficiency of
glutathione synthetase
(
EC 6.3.2.3
) activity. This disease is inherited as an autosomal recessive trait, but the clinical condition is also detected in heterozygotes. We report an unusual case of high-anion-gap metabolic acidosis in a 52-year-old woman who was admitted with neurological complaints and breathing problems but without the characteristic clinical features of congenital
glutathione synthetase
deficiency. The etiology of the acidosis could not be attributed to ketoacidosis, lactic acidosis, or ingestion of methanol, salicylate, or ethylene glycol. Analysis of the patient's plasma and urine for organic acids revealed the presence of high concentrations of pyroglutamate (5-oxoproline), which remained high throughout her hospitalization.
...
PMID:Pyroglutamic acidemia in an adult patient. 229 27
Using the unwinding technique in weak alkali, the induction and repair of DNA single-strand breaks was determined after aerobic and anerobic X-irradiation of human fibroblasts, obtained from a patient suffering from 5-oxoprolinuria, and from a clinically healthy control. The
metabolic disorder
associated with 5-oxprolinuria is a deficiency in
glutathione synthetase
activity resulting in a greatly reduced glutathione content in the cells. A small dose-modifying effect of oxygen (o.e.r. = 1.1) was found for these cells in comparison to an o.e.r. of 2.5 for control cells with normal glutathione content. No significant difference was found between the repair capacity of cells with normal and deficient glutathione content, and repair was nearly completed within 60 min of anoxic irradiation in each case. In contrast, after aerobic irradiation of glutathione-deficient cells repaired less than 70 per cent of the breaks during the same period. When the glutathione-deficient cells were incubated with either dithiothreitol or mercaptopropionylglycine directly after aerobic irradiation, almost complete repair was obtained within 60 Min. The data are interpreted as indicating that the repair mechanism for oxically and anoxically induced single-strand breaks is qualitatively different, and requires glutathione in the former case.
...
PMID:Induction and repair of single-strand DNA breaks after X-irradiation of human fibroblasts deficient in glutathione. 697 50