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

More than 20 syndromes among the significant and increasing number of degenerative diseases of neuronal tissues are known to be associated with diabetes mellitus, increased insulin resistance and obesity, disturbed insulin sensitivity, and excessive or impaired insulin secretion. This review briefly presents such syndromes, including Alzheimer disease, ataxia-telangiectasia, Down syndrome/trisomy 21, Friedreich ataxia, Huntington disease, several disorders of mitochondria, myotonic dystrophy, Parkinson disease, Prader-Willi syndrome, Werner syndrome, Wolfram syndrome, mitochondrial disorders affecting oxidative phosphorylation, and vitamin B(1) deficiency/inherited thiamine-responsive megaloblastic anemia syndrome as well as their respective relationship to malignancies, cancer, and aging and the nature of their inheritance (including triplet repeat expansions), genetic loci, and corresponding functional biochemistry. Discussed in further detail are disturbances of glucose metabolism including impaired glucose tolerance and both insulin-dependent and non-insulin-dependent diabetes caused by neurodegeneration in humans and mice, sometimes accompanied by degeneration of pancreatic beta-cells. Concordant mouse models obtained by targeted disruption (knock-out), knock-in, or transgenic overexpression of the respective transgene are also described. Preliminary conclusions suggest that many of the diabetogenic neurodegenerative disorders are related to alterations in oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) and mitochondrial nutrient metabolism, which coincide with aberrant protein precipitation in the majority of affected individuals.
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PMID:Neurodegenerative disorders associated with diabetes mellitus. 1517 61

In this Review, familial and sporadic neurological disorders reported to have an etiological link with DNA repair defects are discussed, with special emphasis placed on the molecular link between the disease phenotype and the precise DNA repair defect. Of the 15 neurological disorders listed, some of which have symptoms of progeria, six--spinocerebellar ataxia with axonal neuropathy-1, Huntington's disease, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, Down syndrome and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis--seem to result from increased oxidative stress, and the inability of the base excision repair pathway to handle the damage to DNA that this induces. Five of the conditions (xeroderma pigmentosum, Cockayne's syndrome, trichothiodystrophy, Down syndrome, and triple-A syndrome) display a defect in the nucleotide excision repair pathway, four (Huntington's disease, various spinocerebellar ataxias, Friedreich's ataxia and myotonic dystrophy types 1 and 2) exhibit an unusual expansion of repeat sequences in DNA, and four (ataxia-telangiectasia, ataxia-telangiectasia-like disorder, Nijmegen breakage syndrome and Alzheimer's disease) exhibit defects in genes involved in repairing double-strand breaks. The current overall picture indicates that oxidative stress is a major causative factor in genomic instability in the brain, and that the nature of the resulting neurological phenotype depends on the pathway through which the instability is normally repaired.
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PMID:Mechanisms of disease: DNA repair defects and neurological disease. 1734 92