Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0004135 (ATM)
13,001 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The reproducibility of a simplified, sensitive and rapid agarose-cell droplet assay for leucocyte migration inhibition factor (LIF) activity was studied. Removal of T cells with anti-T-cell serum eliminated LIF activity, indicating that in humans it is probably the T cell that produces LIF. Cord blood lymphocytes produce LIF, although spontaneous migration of leucocytes is less than in older children. The cause of this apparently does not reside in the PMN leucocytes. Studies of children with immunodeficiency suggest that the T-cell population in humans is heterogenous. B-cell deficiencies such as hypogammaglobulinaemia, have normal PPD and PHA induced LIF production, whilst some patients with ataxia-telangiectasia have defective PPD LIF activity, their PHA LIF activity being only minimally depressed. On the other hand, Down's syndrome patients with reduced blood T cells have remarkably deficient LIF activity to PHA and relatively good activity to PPD. Children receiving steroid therapy lose much of their ability to produce LIF to the specific antigen PPD, but not to the non-specific mitogen PHA.
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PMID:Leucocyte migration inhibition factor (LIF) production by lymphocytes of normal children, newborns, and children with immune deficiency. 13 10

We have studied three patients with ataxia-telangiectasia (AT) and found two of them to have a normal mixed leucocyte culture stimulating and responding ability. However, all three patients and one parent had defective cell-mediated lympholysis (CML), even in the face of a potent proliferative response to allogeneic leucocytes. None of these patients showed significant proliferative responses to common microbial antigens (tetanus toxoid, Candida albicans, purified protein derivative (PPD), diphtheria toxoid, influenza). Our studies indicate tha the T cell defect in AT preferentially affects certain T cell functions associated with antigen recognition and the generation of allogeneic CML, while sparing the allogeneic proliferative response. The selective deficiency of specific lymphocyte functions in a thymic immunodeficiency with a known defect in DNA repair is consistent with the concept that DNA modulating enzymes are important for T cell function.
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PMID:Selective defects in T cell function in ataxia-telangiectasia. 15 50

The eldest brother in a sibship of five children died of acute myelogenous leukemia at 10 years of age. The second and third eldest brothers died of hypoplastic anemia at ages five and nine years, respectively. A surviving 6 year old brother, the proband of the study, has abnormalities that suggest a preleukemic state: mild pancytopenia, platelet dysfunction, immunodeficiency, and bone marrow hypoplasia with approximately 18 per cent blast forms. His 17 year old sister has a mild normochromic normocytic anemia. Cytogenetic studies revealed C-group monosomy in the bone marrows of the proband and the third brother (45, XY, -C); band studies demonstrated that a No. 8 chromosome was missing in the proband (45, XY, -8). At least four of the siblings and their father had cerebellar ataxia, and evidence of a small cerebellum at autopsy examination or by computerized axial tomography. The disorder in this family has major features of two autosomal recessive preleukemic diseases, ataxia-telangiectasia and Fanconi's anemia. However, these and other inherited conditions were excluded by clinical or laboratory criteria, and no environmental causes of the familial disorder were found. The constellation of abnormalities in the family may constitute a new genetic syndrome.
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PMID:A family with acute leukemia, hypoplastic anemia and cerebellar ataxia: association with bone marrow C-monosomy. 28 89

Determinations of IgG subclasses were made by electroimmunoassay and crossed immunoelectrophoresis, and Gm markers were typed in sera from seventeen patients with well-defined immunodeficiency diseases. Certain IgG subclass and Gm patterns were recognized in various diseases: IgG2 deficiency and homozygosity of Gm (4,5) in the cartilage-hair-hypoplasia syndrome, in the ataxia telangiectasia syndrome and in selective IgG subclass deficiency; and IgG3 deficiency and homozygosity of Gm(1,-5) in the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. The findings suggest a common structural or regulator gene defect in some immunodeficiency diseases. In IgA deficiencies, the levels of IgG1 were raised. In patients with IgG subclass deficiencies there was sometimes a compensatory increase of the remaining IgG subclasses, with a preponderance of IgG1 and IgG3. The increased Ig1 showed restricted heterogeneity with only an increase of the electrophoretically cathodal part. This part contained both kappa and lambda chaings. IgG subclass deficiency indicates treatment with gammaglobulin even if the serum levels of IgG are normal or increased.
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PMID:Quantitative and qualitative investigations of serum IgG subclasses in immunodeficiency diseases. 46 57

In the recent studies conducted in patients with various types of primary immunodeficiency diseases, an increased frequency of HLA-A1 or HLA-A2 antigens was reported. In order to determine the frequency of the histocompatibility antigens in ataxia telangiectasia (A-T), HLA typing was carried out in 30 patients with A-T along with their 23 parents and 4 siblings. The results were compared with 138 healthy controls. That study showed no significant difference for the frequencies of 19 HLA antigens of the A and B loci between the controls and A-T patients or their parents-siblings.
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PMID:Histocompatibility (HLA) factors in ataxia telangiectasia. 65 94

Concentrations of IgD and IgE were measured in sera from 165 patients with well-defined immunodeficiency in an effort to find information possibly relevant to the roles of antibodies of these classes in host defense. Values for both immunoglobulins were generally quite low in patients who had marked deficiencies of all three major immunoglobulins, although occasional normal or high normal values for IgD were seen in hypogammaglobulinemic patients. Group mean IgD concentrations were also depressed in patients with Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome and in those with selective IgA deficiency; IgE concentrations were depressed in patients with X-linked immunodeficiency with hyper-IgM and in those with ataxia telangiectasia. IgD and IgE were both significantly elevated in patients with extreme hyperimmunoglobulinemia E and undue susceptibility to infection and in a patient with the Nezelof syndrome; none of these patients had histories suggestive of atopy. In addition, the mean IgE concentration was significantly elevated in patients with selective IgA deficiency, many of whom were atopic, and in those with the Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome. The highest IgD concentration (163 mg/100 ml) was found in serum from a boy with variable immunodeficiency who had a lifelong history of severe recurrent pharyngeal infections, primarily streptococcal in etiology. Recurrent staphylococcal infection was a feature common to many but not all patients with elevated serum IgE concentration. These data may prove useful in the future delineation of biologic roles for antibodies in these two immunoglobulin classes.
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PMID:Serum IgD and IgE concentrations in immunodeficiency diseases. 80 18

Twelve patients suffering from ataxia telangiectasia and relatives of three of them were studied. A late diagnosis prevailed and the neurological symptoms in some turned worse after suffering recognizable viral infections. The cellular and humoral immunodeficiencies were evaluated in each case as well as the simultaneous presence of hyperimmunoglobulinemia and/or auto-antibodies. Among the relatives, there were frequent cases of immunological and neoplastic alterations; cellular immunodeficiency was not detected. Five cases showed lung disease; four with absence of IgA, and histologic interstitial lesion detected in three of them. The hypothesis that the defect of cell immunity predisposes mulisysthemic disease and that an early diagnosis with immune reconstructive treatment can modify the evolution of the disease was considered.
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PMID:[Ataxia telangectasia. Probability of damaging immune mechanisms]. 83 20

Autoimmune disorders are reportedly more frequent than expected in immunodeficient patients and in their relatives. The hypothesis that genetic factors related to immunodeficiency may predispose to the development of autoimmunity was studied in relatives of patients with variable immunodeficiency (VID), ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T), or X-linked infantile agammaglobulinaemia (X-LA). Close relatives of patients with VID or A-T had thyroid and gastric autoantibodies significantly more frequently than did control subjects. No abnormalities were detected in unaffected relatives of X-LA patients. The increased incidence of organ-specific autoantibodies in close relatives of VID patients was confined to those families with more than one member with immunodeficiency. These data suggest that there are at least two forms of VID, one of which is associated with familial autoimmunity. It is postulated that heterozygous carriers of the A-T gene and persons with genes involved in the development of VID may exhibit T-lymphocyte dysfunction which predisposes them to autoimmunity.
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PMID:Autoimmunity in the relatives of patients with immunodeficiency diseases. 89 Oct 19

The clinical and radiographic features of twenty-two cases of ataxia-telangiectasia are reviewed. Severity of pulmonary manifestations tended to correlate closely with severity of immunodeficiency. Observations are made upon the problem of intercurrent malignancy in ataxia-telangiectasia. The radiographic studies of patients seen at the National Institutes of Health with A-T were reviewed retrospectively and correlated with degrees of immunodeficiency determined clinically. Three fairly distinct groups with high, intermediate and low incidence of sinopulmonary disease were found. Comment is made on the problem of increased malignancy in A-T and possible clues in the detection by the radiologist.
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PMID:Ataxia-telangiectasia. 95 65

The authors describe two siblings affected by an immunodeficiency state characterized by low IgA and IgM levels in serum, and an early encephalopathy with infantile spasms and hypsarrhythmia. The nosography of this unusual association and the relationship to ataxia telangiectasia and allied disorders are briefly discussed.
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PMID:Primary immunodeficiency with early encephalopathy in two siblings. An anatomo-clinical study. 108 Apr 62


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