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)

A case of Fabry's disease, an X-linked in-born error of metabolism, presenting as a sudden death in an elderly female, is reported, along with a review of the literature. The pathological findings of the cellular vacuolation and the characteristic inclusion bodies in the tissues are described.
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PMID:Fabry's disease--a rare cause of sudden death. 132 21

A 36-year-old woman was hospitalized because of nephrotic syndrome. On admission, laboratory studies revealed total protein 5.9g/dl, total cholesterol 381mg/dl, urine protein 2-4g/day, C3 68mg/dl(90-185mg/dl) and the immunological tests showed that antinuclear factor, anti-DNA antibodies and the LE cell phenomenon were positive. Renal function was within normal range. After admission, renal biopsy was done. Light microscopic finding showed diffuse membranous glomerulonephritis, and vacuolization of epithelial cells. Immunofluorescent microscopic finding showed a granular specific staining for IgG, IgM, C3 and C1q along the capillary loops. Electron microscopic finding showed subepithelial and subendothelial dense deposits, and visceral epithelial cell cytoplasm containing osmiophilic multilamellar lipoid bodies. In the studies of the enzyme activities, the patient's fibroblast extract demonstrated a partial deficiency of alpha-galactosidase, and urine ceramide trihexoside was positive. But the patient's leukocyte extract did not demonstrate a deficiency of alpha-galactosidase. So Fabry's disease associated with lupus nephritis was diagnosed. It seems that the case of Fabry's disease which is an X-linked disorder caused by deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme alpha-galactosidase, associated with lupus nephritis, is extremely rare.
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PMID:[A case of Fabry's disease associated with lupus nephritis]. 133 14

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 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

Angiokeratoma corporis diffusum (Fabry's disease) is an X-linked disorder of glycosphingolipid catabolism. Heterozygous females, although usually asymptomatic, are occasionally as severely afflicted as hemizygous males; recently we identified a heterozygous patient with cardiomyopathy and severe pain in the extremities. In order to elucidate the difference of the clinical features, we analyzed the glycolipid composition of the heart, liver, and kidney obtained from the patient and from a hemizygote. Gas-liquid chromatography revealed that globotriaosylceramide (Gb3) was markedly increased in the heart (32.4 times higher than control) and increased to a lesser extent in the liver and kidney (3.74 and 6.79 times, respectively). The pattern of Gb3 accumulation in the heterozygote, where the highest increases were seen in the heart, was distinct from that in the hemizygote, where elevated levels of Gb3 and Ga2 were found in the kidney. Furthermore, the alpha-galactosidase activity in the heart, liver, and kidney of the heterozygote was 17%, 26%, and 36%, respectively, of normal controls, which correlated well with the accumulation of glycosphingolipid in the heart and with the disease's clinical manifestations. Two other hemizygotic patients, who were identified by low alpha-galactosidase activities, demonstrated the cardiac involvement.
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PMID:Biochemical and clinical analysis of accumulated glycolipids in symptomatic heterozygotes of angiokeratoma corporis diffusum (Fabry's disease) in comparison with hemizygotes. 215 88

Fabry disease, an inborn error of glycosphingolipid catabolism, results from mutations in the X-linked gene encoding the lysosomal enzyme, alpha-galactosidase A (EC 3.2.1.22). Six alpha-galactosidase A gene rearrangements that cause Fabry disease were investigated to assess the role of Alu repetitive elements and short direct and/or inverted repeats in the generation of these germinal mutations. The breakpoints of five partial gene deletions and one partial gene duplication were determined by either cloning and sequencing the mutant gene from an affected hemizygote, or by polymerase chain reaction amplifying and sequencing the genomic region containing the novel junction. Although the alpha-galactosidase A gene contains 12 Alu repetitive elements (representing approximately 30% of the 12-kilobase (kb) gene or approximately 1 Alu/1.0 kb), only one deletion resulted from an Alu-Alu recombination. The remaining five rearrangements involved illegitimate recombinational events between short direct repeats of 2 to 6 base pairs (bp) at the deletion or duplication breakpoints. Of these rearrangements, one had a 3' short direct repeat within an Alu element, while another was unusual having two deletions of 1.7 kb and 14 bp separated by a 151-bp inverted sequence. These findings suggested that slipped mispairing or intrachromosomal exchanges involving short direct repeats were responsible for the generation of most of these gene rearrangements. There were no inverted repeat sequences or alternating purine-pyrimidine regions which may have predisposed the gene to these rearrangements. Intriguingly, the tetranucleotide CCAG and the trinucleotide CAG (or their respective complements, CTGG and CTG) occurred within or adjacent to the direct repeats at the 5' breakpoints in three and four of the five alpha-galactosidase A gene rearrangements, respectively, suggesting a possible functional role in these illegitimate recombinational events. These studies indicate that short direct repeats are important in the formation of gene rearrangements, even in human genes like alpha-galactosidase A that are rich in Alu repetitive elements.
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PMID:Alpha-galactosidase A gene rearrangements causing Fabry disease. Identification of short direct repeats at breakpoints in an Alu-rich gene. 216 Sep 73

Anderson-Fabry disease is an X-linked inborn error of metabolism characterized by subnormal activity of the lysosomal hydrolase, alpha-galactosidase A. We have assessed the incidence and nature of neuropathy in 12 patients (seven affected men and five carrier females). Abnormalities of cutaneous thermal sensation were common, even in asymptomatic carriers, with a unique predilection for cold sensitivity which suggests involvement of small myelinated nerve fibres. Intracranial abnormalities were frequently detected by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in males, both with and without overt cerebrovascular disease, and were more extensive in older patients. Such abnormalities were not detected in carriers. Auditory and vestibular abnormalities were present in six patients, only one of whom was symptomatic. Cranial MRI and assessment of cutaneous thermal thresholds are sensitive techniques which can identify neurological involvement in asymptomatic patients. They may be of benefit in monitoring the effectiveness of enzyme replacement therapy and excluding the carrier state for the defective gene.
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PMID:The neurological complications of Anderson-Fabry disease (alpha-galactosidase A deficiency)--investigation of symptomatic and presymptomatic patients. 216 95

The inherited lysosomal storage diseases are a distinct group of inborn errors of metabolism characterised by deficiencies in specific lysosomal enzymes. As many as 40 such disorders have now been described in man. We have measured the activities of up to 16 lysosomal acid hydrolases in plasma and/or extracts of leucocytes and cultured skin fibroblasts from 198 patients referred from throughout Ireland. These 16 assays allowed the biochemical diagnosis of 20 lysosomal storage diseases. Activities were compared with reference ranges to determine homozygotes and heterozygotes. Of the 44 patients with positive results, 15 were diagnosed as being homozygous for a specific lysosomal enzyme deficiency, 4 were identified as having multiple enzyme deficiencies (mucolipidosis Type II/I-cell disease) and 25 had heterozygote (carrier) enzyme levels. Of the latter, 24 were either parents (obligate heterozygotes) or siblings of homozygotes and one was a heterozygote for the X-linked recessively inherited Fabry's disease.
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PMID:The biochemical diagnosis of lysosomal storage diseases--a review of five years experience. 228 77

Fabry's disease is an X-linked disorder of glycolipid catabolism. We have found a symptomatic heterozygous female with cardiomyopathy and severe pain in the extremities. We studied histochemically and biochemically the accumulated glycolipids in spinal and sympathetic ganglia of the patient. Histochemical examination demonstrated the marked glycolipid deposits that have been observed in heterozygous males in these ganglia. Gas-liquid chromatography (GLC) revealed that these accumulated glycolipids were characterized as globotriaosylceramide (Gb3cer) and galabiosylceramide (Ga2cer). In the heterozygous female, the accumulations of Gb3cer in spinal and sympathetic ganglia were, respectively, 34 and 48 times the amount in normal controls. This is the first report on quantitative and qualitative analyses of the accumulated glycolipids in spinal and sympathetic ganglia of a heterozygous carrier female.
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PMID:Accumulation of glycosphingolipids in spinal and sympathetic ganglia of a symptomatic heterozygote of Fabry's disease. 250 Apr 99


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