Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0002986 (Fabry)
5,646 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Methods for the PCR amplification of five polymorphic sites in the region Xq21.33 to Xq24 were developed and used to predict heterozygosity for Fabry disease in informative families. Clones containing polymorphic sites associated with DNA segments DXS17, DXS87, and DXS287, and the alpha-galactosidase A gene were isolated from genomic libraries. Surrounding nucleotide sequences and optimal conditions for amplification of each polymorphic site were determined. These amplifiable polymorphisms provided predictions of heterozygosity for Fabry disease and should be useful for diagnostic linkage analyses in Alport syndrome, X-linked cleft palate and ankyloglossia, Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease, and X-linked agammaglobulinemia as well as sequence-tagged sites for gene mapping.
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PMID:Amplification of human polymorphic sites in the X-chromosomal region q21.33 to q24: DXS17, DXS87, DXS287, and alpha-galactosidase A. 134 83

Fabry disease is an X-linked glycosphingolipid storage disease caused by deficiency of alpha-galactosidase. Storage of globotriaosylceramide, also known as ceramide trihexoside, is maximal in blood vessels but also occurs in neurons. We performed neuropathological histochemical studies on the brains and spinal cords of 2 patients with confirmed Fabry disease. Luxol fast blue-positive deposits were found in blood vessels throughout the central and peripheral nervous system and within selected neurons in spinal cord and ganglia, brainstem, amygdala, hypothalamus, and entorhinal cortex. Regions adjacent to involved neuronal groups, including nucleus basalis, striatum, globus pallidus, and thalamus, were spared. Electron microscopy showed lamellar cytoplasmic neuronal inclusion bodies. Using a monoclonal antibody reactive with ceramide trihexoside, we found more extensive neuronal deposition than evident by Luxol-fast blue staining and new areas of neuronal storage in the spinal cord and cerebral cortex. Blood vessels throughout the nervous system were strongly immunoreactive. The highly selective pattern of neuronal involvement we found suggests that glycosphingolipid exposure, uptake, or catabolism varies greatly with respect to neuronal morphology and distribution. The degree of toxicity to neurons and the clinical significance of this neuronal storage remains to be defined.
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PMID:Fabry disease: immunocytochemical characterization of neuronal involvement. 137 13

Fabry's disease (angiokeratoma corporis diffusum universale) is an inborn error of metabolism, which is based on a shortage in the cumulation of glycosphingolipids in endothelial and epithelial cells of glomeruli, vascular endothelia and in ganglion cells with subsequent severe organ damage. Heredity is X-linked recessive. In the submitted paper the authors present a case-history of a family where three men were affected and carriership was confirmed in five women. During the first pregnancy one of them a successful prenatal diagnosis was made from cultivated amniotic fluid cells. Chromosomal examination revealed female sex and the levels of the alpha-galactosidase A were established in cultivated cells. A healthy girl was delivered.
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PMID:[Present possibilities of prenatal diagnosis of Fabry's disease]. 148 71

Among many metabolic disorders, porphyrias and Fabry disease are known to affect autonomic nervous system. In patients with acute intermittent porphyria, hereditary coproporphyria, and variegate porphyria, autonomic symptoms such as abdominal pain, vomiting, hypertension and tachycardia are among the most prominent clinical manifestations. Fabry disease is clinically characterized by severe limb pain, hypohidrosis, angiokeratomas and various autonomic symptoms. In both porphyrias and Fabry disease, pathological changes in the central and peripheral autonomic nervous system have been documented. In porphyrias, a loss of myelinated fibers, axonal degeneration, and segmental demyelination in peripheral autonomic nerves as well as chromatolysis of several brain stem nuclei have been found. In Fabry disease, abnormal amount of the substrates of alpha-galactosidase, i.e. ceramide di- and trihexoside, are found to be accumulated in the central and peripheral autonomic nerves.
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PMID:[Autonomic dysfunction in metabolic diseases]. 161 65

A new variant form of Fabry disease with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy of late onset is reported. Two unrelated male hemizygotes of this disease first presented with signs and symptoms of cardiomyopathy after 50 years of age. Cultured lymphoblastoid cells showed significantly higher residual alpha-galactosidase A activities than in the patients with classical phenotypic expressions.
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PMID:Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in late-onset variant of Fabry disease with high residual activity of alpha-galactosidase A. 164 38

Heterozygous Fabry's disease has an inconstant expression and very few complications. The theory of X-chromosome inactivation which, according to Lyon, occurs hazardly, is illustrated by the fact that the disease is expressed even in hemizygous women. Ophthalmic manifestations, as detected by the slit lamp method, are almost constant, 80 p. 100 of women with the disease having a verticillate cornea. Angiokeratoma is present in 20 p. 100 of the cases. Episodes of paraesthesia of the hands and feet are less common; in most cases they are attributed to the disease retrospectively, during family investigations. In two girls aged 10 and 11 years respectively and without history of Fabry's disease the only symptom suggestive of the diagnosis was paroxysmal acroparaesthesia. In one of the girls acroparaesthesia was associated with acrocyanosis, livedo and acro-osteolysis, but concordance was the only argument in favour of a link with Fabry's disease. Alterations of the extremities have been reported in this disease, including palmar erythema and a bluish discoloration of the palms due to dilatation of the superficial veins. Only two cases of livedo have been published. Acrosteolysis has never been documented in Fabry's disease, and its presence must be confirmed in further cases. The diagnosis of heterozygous Fabry's disease in these 2 girls was confirmed by the finding of ceramide trihexoside in urine and by leucocyte alpha-galactosidase levels that were 25 to 30 p. 100 of values obtained in controls. A study of the family of one of the girls showed that the father was involved; this hemizygous type of the disease with a 10 p. 100 alphagalactosidase level was totally asymptomatic.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Early acroparesthesia in females: a sign disclosing heterozygote Fabry disease]. 164 27

Polymerase chain reaction amplification of reverse-transcribed messenger RNA from a patient with Fabry disease revealed a 13-base pair deletion in the 5' region (exon 1) of alpha-galactosidase A complementary DNA. This gene rearrangement was not detected by Southern or Northern analysis. Short direct repeats were present around the breakpoints, and considered to be of pathogenetic significance. Gene diagnosis of the mother and a female cousin was successfully achieved by polymerase chain reaction amplification of genomic DNA; the former as a Fabry disease heterozygote and the latter as a normal homozygote.
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PMID:Fabry disease: detection of 13-bp deletion in alpha-galactosidase A gene and its application to gene diagnosis of heterozygotes. 165 Jan 61

We report the results of a fluorometric assay for alpha-galactosidase A (EC.3.2.1.22) in plasma and leukocytes, and fast atom bombardment/mass spectrometry (FAB/MS) analysis of glycosphingolipids in urine sediments from a patient with Fabry's disease. In plasma, this patient had only 5.0% of the normal amount of alpha-galactosidase A, and his brother and mother had 11.0% and 25.0%, respectively. In leukocytes, the activities were below 8.0%. Glycosphingolipids from urine sediments were partially purified using a Sep-Pack C18 cartridge. The chemical diagnosis of Fabry's disease can be made more rapidly and accurately using fluorometric and FAB/MS analyses.
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PMID:Chemical diagnosis of Fabry's disease by fluorometric assay and fast atom bombardment/mass spectrometry. 165 42

Fabry disease is an X linked recessive disorder of glycosphingolipid metabolism resulting from a deficiency of the lysosomal hydrolase alpha-galactosidase (alpha-gal). Measurement of the enzyme activity, however, is not an accurate method for identification of female carriers among at risk relatives of affected males. The alpha-gal cDNA and gene have been cloned previously and found to provide useful probes for the molecular analysis of affected families but these clones have not been available to us. Thus, to analyse Fabry disease in Nova Scotia, especially within a large kindred known to contain 30 affected males and 50 possible carrier females, we isolated an independent cDNA for alpha-gal. Using this clone as a probe, the mutation in the Nova Scotia kindred was shown not to be a major DNA alteration, but was found to be linked to the rarer allele (frequency 0.20) of the polymorphic NcoI site located 3' to the gene. Affected males from two Nova Scotia families who cannot be associated with the kindred by history were also found to have the rarer NcoI allele, which suggests they are, in fact, part of the kindred. The coupling of the mutation to an infrequent marker also helped carrier identification in the kindred where all of 17 obligate carriers examined, including six who were not identified as carriers by enzyme assays, were found to be heterozygous for the RFLP. Thus, DNA analysis can be used for presymptomatic and prenatal diagnosis in most portions of the Nova Scotia kindred affected with Fabry disease.
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PMID:Fabry disease in a large Nova Scotia kindred: carrier detection using leucocyte alpha-galactosidase activity and an NcoI polymorphism detected by an alpha-galactosidase cDNA clone. 167 24

Fabry disease is an X-linked disorder accompanied with accumulation of glycosphingolipids resulting from the deficient activity of the lysosomal hydrolase, alpha-galactosidase A (alpha-GalA). In the present study, mRNA for alpha-GalA in fibroblasts from an 11-year-old Japanese patient with Fabry disease was examined using the reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The shorter message of alpha-GalA was demonstrated in this patient when compared with the normal control. The complete deletion of exon 4 in the mRNA for alpha-GalA in the patient was disclosed by analysis of cDNA with restriction enzyme digestion and asymmetrical PCR sequencing. The direct sequencing of the genomic DNA demonstrated a single base substitution (G----A) at the 3' end of the consensus sequence of intron 3. This mutation destroyed a splice site in the alpha-GalA, which produced a mutant allele. It was also shown that the mother of the patient had this mutant as well as normal alleles as a heterozygote.
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PMID:A 3' splice site consensus sequence mutation in the intron 3 of the alpha-galactosidase A gene in a patient with Fabry disease. 175 37


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