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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (
ataxia
)
15,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Friedreich's ataxia, an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by progressive gait and limb
ataxia
, cardiomyopathy, and diabetes mellitus, is caused by decreased
frataxin
production or function. The structure of human
frataxin
, which we have determined at 1.8-A resolution, reveals a novel protein fold. A five-stranded, antiparallel beta sheet provides a flat platform, which supports a pair of parallel alpha helices, to form a compact alphabeta sandwich. A cluster of 12 acidic residues from the first helix and the first strand of the large sheet form a contiguous anionic surface on the protein. The overall protein structure and the anionic patch are conserved in eukaryotes, including animals, plants, and yeast, and in prokaryotes. Additional conserved residues create an extended 1008-A(2) patch on a distinct surface of the protein. Side chains of disease-associated mutations either contribute to the anionic patch, help create the second conserved surface, or point toward
frataxin
's hydrophobic core. These structural findings predict potential modes of protein-protein and protein-iron binding.
...
PMID:Crystal structure of human frataxin. 1090 Jan 92
Large expansions of the trinucleotide repeat GAA*TTC within the first intron of the
X25
(
frataxin
) gene cause Friedreich's ataxia, the most common inherited
ataxia
. Expansion leads to reduced levels of
frataxin
mRNA in affected individuals. Here we show that GAA*TTC tracts, in the absence of any other
frataxin
gene sequences, can reduce the amount of GAA-containing transcript produced in a defined in vitro transcription system. This effect is due to an impediment to elongation that forms in the GAA*TTC tract during transcription, a phenomenon that is exacerbated by both superhelical stress and increased tract length. On supercoiled templates the major truncations of the GAA-containing transcripts occur in the distal (3') end of the GAA repeat. To account for these observations we present a model in which an RNA polymerase advancing within a long GAA*TTC tract initiates the transient formation of an R*R*Y intramolecular DNA triplex. The non-template (GAA) strand folds back creating a loop in the template strand, and the polymerase is paused at the distal triplex-duplex junction.
...
PMID:The GAA*TTC triplet repeat expanded in Friedreich's ataxia impedes transcription elongation by T7 RNA polymerase in a length and supercoil dependent manner. 1090 40
Friedreich's ataxia is caused by mutations in the FRDA gene that encodes
frataxin
, a nuclear-encoded mitochondrial protein. Most patients are homozygous for the expansion of a GAA triplet repeat within the FRDA gene, but a few patients show compound heterozygosity for a point mutation and the GAA-repeat expansion. We analyzed DNA samples from a cohort of 241 patients with autosomal recessive or isolated spinocerebellar
ataxia
for the GAA triplet expansion. Patients heterozygous for the GAA expansion were screened for point mutations within the FRDA coding region. Molecular analyses included the single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis, direct sequencing, and linkage analysis with FRDA locus flanking markers. Seven compound heterozygous patients were identified. In four patients, a point mutation that predicts a truncated
frataxin
was detected. Three of them associated classic early-onset Friedreich's ataxia with an expanded GAA allele greater than 800 repeats. The other patient associated late-onset disease at the age of 29 years with a 350-GAA repeat expansion. In two patients manifesting the classical phenotype, no changes were observed by single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis. Linkage analysis in a family with two children affected by an ataxic syndrome, one of them showing heterozygosity for the GAA expansion, confirmed no linkage to the FRDA locus. Most point mutations in compound heterozygous Friedreich's ataxia patients are null mutations. In the present patients, clinical phenotype seems to be related to the GAA repeat number in the expanded allele. Complete molecular definition in these patients is required for clinical diagnosis and genetic counseling.
...
PMID:Genotype and phenotype analysis of Friedreich's ataxia compound heterozygous patients. 1098 87
Disease-causing mutations have been identified in various entities of autosomal dominant
ataxia
and in Friedreich's ataxia. However, no molecular pathogenic factor is known to cause idiopathic cerebellar ataxias. We investigated the CAG/CTG trinucleotide repeats causing spinocerebellar
ataxia
types 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8 and 12, and the GAA repeat of the
frataxin
gene in 124 patients apparently suffering from idiopathic sporadic
ataxia
, including 20 patients with the clinical diagnosis of multiple system atrophy. Patients with a positive family history, a typical Friedreich phenotype, or symptomatic
ataxia
were excluded. Genetic analyses uncovered the most common Friedreich mutation in 10 patients with an age at onset between 13 and 36 years. The SCA6 mutation was present in nine patients with disease onset between 47 and 68 years of age. The CTG repeat associated with SCA8 was expanded in three patients. One patient had SCA2 attributable to a de novo mutation from a paternally transmitted, intermediate allele. We did not identify the SCA1, SCA3, SCA7 or SCA12 mutation in idiopathic sporadic
ataxia
patients. No trinucleotide repeat expansion was detected in the MSA subgroup. This study has revealed the genetic basis in 19% of apparently idiopathic
ataxia
patients. SCA6 is the most frequent mutation in late onset cerebellar ataxia. The
frataxin
trinucleotide expansion should be investigated in all sporadic
ataxia
patients with onset before age 40, even when the phenotype is atypical for Friedreich's ataxia.
...
PMID:Genetic background of apparently idiopathic sporadic cerebellar ataxia. 1103 Apr 10
The possible causes of abnormal iron metabolism in patients with Friedreich's ataxia are considered. Reduced expression of a
frataxin
homologue in yeast is associated with mitochondrial iron accumulation at the expense of cytosolic iron, and the same phenomenon can be demonstrated in these patients. A decrease in cytosolic iron causes the expression of a high-affinity iron-uptake protein, and therefore Friedreich's ataxia can be considered to be a disease of abnormal intracellular iron distribution. Friedreich's ataxia is of autosomal recessive inheritance, and the gene associated with it has been mapped to chromosome 9. This encodes the protein
frataxin
which regulates mitochondrial iron transport. The commonest mutation causing this disorder is an expanded GAA repeat in the gene for this protein. Different point mutations may account for some of the variations in the phenotypic features that are often found, and these variations are discussed. These findings have raised therapeutic possibilities in a condition for which previously there was no specific treatment. There are intracellular enzymes which are very sensitive to injury by oxygen-free radicals. Treatment has therefore been tried with ibebenone which acts as a free-radical scavenger, with some evidence of improvement. Iron chelating agents, such as deferoxamine, have also been given, but the finding of normal serum iron and ferritin casts doubt on the rationale of this. However the finding that the accumulation of iron in the mitochondria of the cells in patients with this form of
ataxia
will cause oxidative stress and cell death, gives hope for more effective treatment in the future, possibly with gene therapy.
...
PMID:Friedreich's ataxia and iron metabolism. 1111 Oct 58
Two sisters developed isolated cerebellar ataxia with pyramidal signs and preservation of reflexes at 49 and 63 years of age. Presence of two abnormal expansions GAA on both allels of the frataxine gene led to the diagnosis of
Friedreich ataxia
. These cases demonstrate the place of genetic tests in the diagnosis of late onset autosomal recessive
ataxia
.
...
PMID:[Genetic tests: how far should we go? A case of late-onset Friedreich's disease]. 1113 31
With the availability of a simple molecular test that distinguishes
Friedreich ataxia
, the most frequent form of inherited
ataxia
, from other recessive ataxias, it now becomes possible to unravel the genetic heterogeneity of the latter. We have now localised two genes causing autosomal recessive spinocerebellar
ataxia
in two consanguineous families. In the first family, the four affected Japanese sibs had spinocerebellar
ataxia
associated with elevated levels of serum creatine kinase, gamma-globulin, and alpha-foetoprotein. Homozygosity over a 20 cM region allowed to demonstrate linkage at 9q33.3-34.3 with a lod score of 3.0. Genotyping two unrelated Japanese patients from first degree consanguineous parents revealed that one was homozygous for the same region but did not share the biochemical features. In the second family, an Israeli uncle and a niece were affected by an early-onset recessive
ataxia
and subsequently developed hearing impairment and optic atrophy. Homozygosity over a 17 cM region allowed demonstration of linkage at 6p21-23 with a lod score of 3.25. These two localisations of autosomal recessive
ataxia
genes represent a first step toward the identification of genetically homogenous, non-Friedreich, ataxic patients and subsequent cloning of the genes.
...
PMID:Homozygosity mapping of spinocerebellar ataxia with cerebellar atrophy and peripheral neuropathy to 9q33-34, and with hearing impairment and optic atrophy to 6p21-23. 1117 88
Friedreich ataxia
(
FRDA
), the most common autosomal recessive
ataxia
, is characterized by degeneration of the large sensory neurons and spinocerebellar tracts, cardiomyopathy and increased incidence in diabetes.
FRDA
is caused by severely reduced levels of
frataxin
, a mitochondrial protein of unknown function. Yeast knockout models as well as histological and biochemical data from heart biopsies or autopsies of
FRDA
patients have shown that
frataxin
defects cause a specific iron-sulfur protein deficiency and intramitochondrial iron accumulation. We have recently shown that complete absence of
frataxin
in the mouse leads to early embryonic lethality, demonstrating an important role for
frataxin
during mouse development. Through a conditional gene-targeting approach, we have generated in parallel a striated muscle
frataxin
-deficient line and a neuron/cardiac muscle
frataxin
-deficient line, which together reproduce important progressive pathophysiological and biochemical features of the human disease: cardiac hypertrophy without skeletal muscle involvement, large sensory neuron dysfunction without alteration of the small sensory and motor neurons, and deficient activities of complexes I-III of the respiratory chain and of the aconitases. Our models demonstrate time-dependent intramitochondrial iron accumulation in a
frataxin
-deficient mammal, which occurs after onset of the pathology and after inactivation of the Fe-S-dependent enzymes. These mutant mice represent the first mammalian models to evaluate treatment strategies for the human disease.
...
PMID:Mouse models for Friedreich ataxia exhibit cardiomyopathy, sensory nerve defect and Fe-S enzyme deficiency followed by intramitochondrial iron deposits. 1117 86
Friedreich's ataxia (FA) is the most common form of autosomal recessive spinocerebellar
ataxia
and is often associated with a cardiomyopathy. The disease is caused by an expanded intronic GAA repeat, which results in deficiency of a mitochondrial protein called
frataxin
. In the yeast YFH1 knockout model of the disease there is evidence that
frataxin
deficiency leads to a severe defect of mitochondrial respiration, intramitochondrial iron accumulation, and associated production of oxygen free radicals. Recently, the analysis of FA cardiac and skeletal muscle samples and in vivo phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy (31P-MRS) has confirmed the deficits of respiratory chain complexes in these tissues. The role of oxidative stress in FA is further supported by the accumulation of iron and decreased aconitase activities in cardiac muscle. We used 31P-MRS to evaluate the effect of 6 months of antioxidant treatment (Coenzyme Q10 400 mg/day, vitamin E 2,100 IU/day) on cardiac and calf muscle energy metabolism in 10 FA patients. After only 3 months of treatment, the cardiac phosphocreatine to ATP ratio showed a mean relative increase to 178% (p = 0.03) and the maximum rate of skeletal muscle mitochondrial ATP production increased to 139% (p = 0.01) of their respective baseline values in the FA patients. These improvements, greater in prehypertrophic hearts and in the muscle of patients with longer GAA repeats, were sustained after 6 months of therapy. The neurological and echocardiographic evaluations did not show any consistent benefits of the therapy after 6 months. This study demonstrates partial reversal of a surrogate biochemical marker in FA with antioxidant therapy and supports the evaluation of such therapy as a disease-modifying strategy in this neurodegenerative disorder.
...
PMID:Antioxidant treatment improves in vivo cardiac and skeletal muscle bioenergetics in patients with Friedreich's ataxia. 1135 49
Friedreich ataxia
(FA), the most common form of degenerative
ataxia
, is thought to be caused by respiratory deficiency due to mitochondrial iron accumulation and oxidative stress. Idebenone, a free-radical scavenger, protects mitochondrial function in in vitro models of FA. In a placebo-controlled crossover trial we studied the effect of idebenone on respiratory function in nine ambulant FA patients. (31)P magnetic resonance spectroscopy demonstrated mitochondrial impairment in vivo in skeletal muscle of all FA patients, but no recovery with idebenone. No effects were seen in clinical scores. Echocardiography did not confirm a preliminary study reporting improvement of FA-associated cardiomyopathy with idebenone.
...
PMID:Idebenone in patients with Friedreich ataxia. 1140 22
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