Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Eight carriers of the A3243G mutation of mitochondrial DNA without stroke-like episodes were monitored for up to 7 years in clinical and metabolic studies, by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and positron emission tomography (PET). None developed mitochondrial encephalopathy (
MELAS
), but 2 developed
diabetes mellitus
, 1 terminal kidney failure and 2 cardiomyopathy. One patient improved markedly under ubiquinone. Electroencephalography showed progressive slowing in 2 cases, but electrophysiological tests and MRI were otherwise noncontributary. PET showed widespread cortical and basal ganglion metabolic deficits in 6 cases. We conclude that internal medical complications are more common than
MELAS
in adult carriers of the mutation. PET findings, firstly reported in such patients, suggest that chronic subclinical encephalopathy is very frequent, and PET may play a role in monitoring in the future.
...
PMID:Follow-up in carriers of the 'MELAS' mutation without strokes. 947 18
Mitochondrial diseases are characterized by considerable clinical variability and are most often caused by mutations in mtDNA. Because of the phenotypic variability, epidemiological studies of the frequency of these disorders have been difficult to perform. We studied the prevalence of the mtDNA mutation at nucleotide 3243 in an adult population of 245,201 individuals. This mutation is the most common molecular etiology of
MELAS syndrome
(mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and strokelike episodes), one of the clinical entities among the mitochondrial disorders. Patients with
diabetes mellitus
, sensorineural hearing impairment, epilepsy, occipital brain infarct, ophthalmoplegia, cerebral white-matter disease, basal-ganglia calcifications, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, or ataxia were ascertained on the basis of defined clinical criteria and family-history data. A total of 615 patients were identified, and 480 samples were examined for the mutation. The mutation was found in 11 pedigrees, and its frequency was calculated to be >=16. 3/100,000 in the adult population (95% confidence interval 11.3-21. 4/100,000). The mutation had arisen in the population at least nine times, as determined by mtDNA haplotyping. Clinical evaluation of the probands revealed a syndrome that most frequently consisted of hearing impairment, cognitive decline, and short stature. The high prevalence of the common
MELAS
mutation in the adult population suggests that mitochondrial disorders constitute one of the largest diagnostic categories of neurogenetic diseases.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of A3243G, the mutation for mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and strokelike episodes: prevalence of the mutation in an adult population. 968 91
The A3243G mutation of mitochondrial DNA is associated to the
MELAS syndrome
and to transmitted forms of
diabetes mellitus
. This mutation exists in a heteroplasmic state and can be present at a minor and hardly detectable level. The aim was to design a method which could be applied to large series of samples and could provide rapid, sensitive and quantitative detection of this mutation in the wild-type mitochondrial DNA background. The ability of ligation detection reaction (LDR) to satisfy these objectives was evaluated. Ligation detection reaction was performed on a model template composed of mixtures of various proportions of plasmids bearing the wild-type or mutant mitochondrial DNA sequence. Radiolabelled or fluorescent primers and the wild-type and mutant LDR products were separated by electrophoresis on conventional denaturating gel or on an Applied Biosystem 373. The ratios of mutant/wild-type products were consistent with the initial ratios of the plasmids in the template. The sensitivity and accuracy of the fluorescence and isotopic detection methods were similar. The detection limit of mutant DNA was 10% of total mitochondrial DNA. The percentage of mutant DNA in DNA samples extracted from leukocytes of 19 patients having the mutation at different levels, was evaluated by fluorescent or isotopic LDR.
...
PMID:Detection and quantification of the A3243G mutation of mitochondrial DNA by ligation detection reaction. 977 52
Clinical and biochemical classifications of mitochondrial disorders have given way to an as yet incomplete genetic classification system based on alterations of the mitochondrial genome, the nuclear genome, or both. The first group includes mitochondrial disorders due to specific mutations of mitochondrial DNA such as the
MELAS
, MERRF or NARP encephalomyopathies, various conditions involving deafness (non-syndromic or associated with
diabetes
), Leber's optic neuropathy and a small group of cases of maternally transmitted Leigh's syndrome. All these diseases are transmitted through maternal line. conditions which are usually sporadic are due to deletion or duplication of mitochondrial DNA, and give rise to myopathies, with or without ophthalmoplegia, and to more complex disorders such as Kearns Sayre syndrome are also included. The second group is composed of all the mitochondrial disorders in which the nuclear genes which codify sub-units of mitochondrial DNA contain a genetic defect. This includes most cases of Leigh's syndrome, Alpers polydystrophies, the myoneurogastrointestinal syndrome, Barth's syndrome and Friedreich's disease. Amongst the disorders secondary to defects in communication between the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes is a progressive external ophthalmoplegic form with autosomal dominance which arises secondary to mutations on chromosomes 3 and 10. Further mitochondrial disorders due to faults in the relationship between the two genomes will probably be found in the near future.
...
PMID:[Classification of mitochondrial diseases]. 981 May 85
We report a 28-year-old young male with
MELAS syndrome
(mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes) presenting with two previous episodes of stroke-like manifestation, lactic acidosis and mitochondrial cardiomyopathy. He was also affected with insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(IDDM), as diagnosed by the experience of diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA), and dependence on insulin therapy. On admission, the serum lactate level was found to be increased to 5.4 mmol/l, and plasma glucose level to 7.9 mmol/l with haemoglobin A1c 8.4%, while he was using insulin 26-30 units per day. Physical examination revealed a short stature male of height of 150 cm and weight of 49 kg. Mild mental retardation with bilateral sensorineural hearing impairment was observed. After glucagon stimulation, C-peptide levels rose from 0.46 nmol/l to 0.53 nmol/l, indicative of impaired insulin secretion. Anti-glutamate decarboxylase (anti-GAD) antibody was positive. In addition, human leucocyte associated antigen (HLA) typing showed DR3 and DR4, suggesting the strong contribution of autoimmunity to the pathogenesis of IDDM in this patient. Moreover, the result of a treadmill exercise test was positive due to inferior wall myocardial ischaemia. Cardiac catheterization and endomyocardial biopsy disclosed a normal coronary angiogram and confirmed the diagnosis of mitochondrial cardiomyopathy. Molecular genetic analysis of his family revealed a sporadic occurrence of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutation at base pair (bp) 3243. The degree of heteroplasmy of mtDNA mutation from a total of 19 passages of skin-derived fibroblasts from this patient showed a slightly downward trend. This extremely rare case of sporadic
MELAS syndrome
with autoimmune IDDM harbouring mtDNA mutation highlights the possible pathogenetic role of mtDNA mutations in autoimmune disease.
...
PMID:Autoimmune IDDM in a sporadic MELAS patient with mitochondrial tRNA(Leu(UUR)) mutation. 982 17
The serum pyruvate and lactate levels were studied after exercise on a bicycle ergometer in a family of
diabetes mellitus
(DM) associated with a mutation at nucleotide 3243 in the mitochondrial gene. A 56-year-old Japanese woman with the mutation at a percentage of 5% in the blood had insulin-dependent DM and sensory hearing loss without muscle symptoms. Her serum lactate and pyruvate levels increased markedly during and after exercise on a bicycle ergometer. Two of her sons were found to have the same mutation at a percentage of 17% and 18%, respectively. Her 26-year-old son was found to have borderline DM after oral glucose loading, although he showed no abnormalities of the metabolism of pyruvate and lactate. Her 31-year-old son showed no abnormalities after oral glucose loading and after exercise on a bicycle ergometer. Although the same mutation causes more severe
MELAS
(mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes), little is known about whether these diabetic patients are subclinically involved with myopathy. The noninvasive ergometer exercise with determination of serum pyruvate and lactate may be useful in evaluating the severity of myopathy in these patients.
...
PMID:[Exercises on a bicycle ergometer in a family of diabetes mellitus associated with a mutation of mitochondrial DNA]. 986 17
The
MELAS syndrome
(mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes) belongs to the category of mitochondrial disorders. The most common molecular aetiology of the syndrome is a mutation at base pair (bp) 3243 in the mitochondrial genome (mtDNA). The phenotype is varied and, apart from central nervous system involvement, the patients with this mutation may present with neurosensory hearing loss,
diabetes mellitus
and cardiomyopathy. These phenotypes suggest that organs dependent on aerobic metabolism suffer most. We investigated the possible clinical and physiological manifestations of impaired energy metabolism in the skin of 28 patients with the bp 3243 mutation in mtDNA. Non-invasive sonography and laser Doppler flowmetry were used to measure skin thickness and the blood flow of the skin. Skin collagen synthesis was assayed from suction blister fluid. Evaporimetry was used to assess the re-epithelialization rate of suction blister wounds. Histochemistry and immunohistochemistry were used to evaluate the melanocytes and pigment in the skin. Vitiligo was found in three of the 28 patients (11%), which was markedly more than in the general population. Histological findings showed an absence of pigment, but an apparently normal distribution of melanocytes in the dermoepidermal junction. Seborrhoeic eczema and atopy were also somewhat more frequent. No features of premature ageing, such as a marked decrease in skin thickness, blood flow, collagen synthesis or re-epithelialization rate, were demonstrated.
...
PMID:Increased prevalence of vitiligo, but no evidence of premature ageing, in the skin of patients with bp 3243 mutation in mitochondrial DNA in the mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes syndrome (MELAS). 1023 12
Out of 90 Portuguese patients with mitochondrial cytopathy, six harbored the A3243G mutation in the mtDNA tRNA(Leu(UUR)) gene ('
MELAS
mutation'). They had heterogeneous clinical features, including myopathy with stroke-like episodes, progressive external ophthalmoparesis,
diabetes mellitus
, and subacute encephalopathy. Histochemical and biochemical analyses of muscle biopsies showed abundant ragged-red fibers reacting positively with the cytochrome oxidase stain, and decreased respiratory chain enzyme activities. On average, the proportion of mutated mtDNA was 67% (20-88%) in tissues from patients and 21% (0-49%) in blood from 20 maternal relatives. The proportion of mutated mitochondrial genomes in muscle did not correlate with clinical presentation or duration of disease. This study, the first in Portuguese patients, confirms the frequent occurrence of the A3243G mutation in patients with mitochondrial diseases, and emphasises the usefulness of genetic testing in reaching a correct diagnosis.
...
PMID:The mitochondrial DNA A3243G mutation in Portugal: clinical and molecular studies in 5 families. 1037 Oct 79
We examined heteroplasmy of mutated mitochondrial DNA in single peripheral lymphocytes derived from 4 individuals carrying the nt 3243 A-to-G mutation, including two patients with
MELAS
, a patient with cardiomyopathy, deafness and
diabetes mellitus
, and the asymptomatic mother of one of the
MELAS
patients. In these subjects, all lymphocytes examined were heteroplasmic to different degrees, with a wider range of heteroplasmy evident in the symptomatic patients than in the healthy carrier.
...
PMID:Single-cell analysis of mitochondrial DNA in patients and a carrier of the tRNA(Leu)(UUR) gene mutation. 1039 93
Heteroplasmic mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) defects are an important cause of inherited human disease. On a cellular level, the percentage of mutant mtDNA is the principal factor behind the expression of the genetic defect. Marked variation in the level of mutant mtDNA among tissues is thought to be responsible for the diverse clinical phenotypes associated with the same pathogenic mtDNA mutation. This study was designed to determine whether the percentage level of a pathogenic mtDNA molecule is determined by a purely random process. The tissue distribution of the A3243G
MELAS
point mutation was analyzed in five individuals who were members of a family with maternally inherited
diabetes
and deafness. The level of mutant mtDNA was measured in four tissues in three individuals and three tissues in two individuals. The highest level of mutant mtDNA occurred in skeletal muscle, followed by hair follicles, and then buccal mucosa, with the lowest levels in blood (leucocyte/platelet fraction). The probability of observing any strict hierarchy in family is 4.82 x 10(-5). These results indicate that the distribution of the A3243G mutation is not solely determined by random processes.
...
PMID:Nonrandom tissue distribution of mutant mtDNA. 1040 50
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
Next >>