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

Ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) is an autosomal recessive, multisystem disease characterized clinically by the onset of progressive cerebellar ataxia at about one year of age, followed by the development of fan-shaped telangiectasia of bulbar conjunctiva, usually at four- to six-years of age; and frequent sinopulmonary infections. The outstanding pathological findings in the central nervous system in A-T are loss of Purkinje cells and, to a lesser degree, basket and granular cells of the cerebellum. Although choreoathetosis and myoclonic jerks had been described in patients with A-T, torticollis has never been reported in the literature. A 7-year-old girl with A-T and torticollis is therefore presented in this paper.
Zhonghua Min Guo Xiao Er Ke Yi Xue Hui Za Zhi
PMID:Ataxia-telangiectasia associated with torticollis: report of a case. 177 44

Our laboratory has reported previously that a unique binding site specific for the hexapeptide angiotensin (A)II(3-8), now referred to as AIV, is present in a number of tissues including bovine adrenal gland, rabbit and guinea pig heart and guinea pig kidney, liver, lung, uterus and brain. The present results extend previous findings in the guinea pig brain and identify binding sites for AIV in the neocortex, paleocortex, hippocampus, medial habenula, superior and inferior colliculi, caudate putamen, thalamus, dorsal tegmentum, central gray, red nucleus, inferior olivary, oculomotor and hypoglossal nuclei and cerebellum. Binding of [125I]AIV in selected regions was shown to be of high affinity (Kd = 0.60-1.47 nM), saturable (maximal number of binding sites = 181-449 fmol/mg of protein) and specific. This binding site was shown to be distinct from the AT1 and AT2 sites with Ki values > 10(-4) M for DuP 753, CGP42112A and PD123177. Changes at the N-terminal of the peptide, either by removal of the valine or by extension of the peptide, resulted in a large decrease in binding affinity. In contrast, C-terminal extensions resulted in little change in affinity for the binding site. Guanosine 5'-0-(3-thiotriphosphate) was shown to have no effect on binding, suggesting that the guinea pig brain binding site is not G-protein-linked. Potential functions associated with this newly discovered A binding site are discussed.
...
PMID:Central angiotensin IV binding sites: distribution and specificity in guinea pig brain. 837 Nov 70