Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011854 (type 1 diabetes)
20,749 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Abnormal antibody production is now recognized as the basis of specific endocrine and neurological diseases and their complications. Among the autoimmune diseases, the best understood from a mechanistic point of view are myasthenia gravis, Graves' disease, several variants of insulin resistance, and a variant of bronchial asthma. In each of these human disorders, the clinical symptoms can be traced to the actions of antireceptor antibodies produced by a deranged immune system. The autoantibodies produced in these diseases are functionally heterogeneous. They may produce the clinical symptoms of hormone or neurotransmitter insufficiency either by blocking the binding of these agents to target cell surface receptors or by accelerating the internalization and degradation of these receptors. In other cases, the autoantibodies may produce the clinical signs of hormone excess by mimicking the actions of the hormone, in an uncontrollable fashion. In some cases, functionally different types of autoantibodies will appear in the same patient at different stages of the disease. For all of these autoantibodies, of whatever function, assays for their presence in serum are available, in forms suitable for clinical chemists, as well as for researchers; these will be described in this review. In addition to the known anti-receptor autoimmune diseases, there are a large number of other autoimmune diseases for which there is fragmentary evidence that their clinical symptoms have an anti-receptor autoantibody etiology. Several examples of this group will be discussed, and assays suitable for establishing the presence of anti-receptor antibodies in the sera of such patients will be provided. The disorders to be considered are: type I diabetes mellitus, chronic atrophic gastritis, autoimmune Addison's disease, autoimmune hypoparathyroidism, type II pseudohypoparathyroidism, resistant ovary syndrome, connective tissue diseases, and the HLA-B8/DR3 antigen haplotype as a potential marker for autoimmune diseases of the anti-receptor type.
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PMID:Receptors, antibodies, and disease. 632 52

Genomic imprinting is the phenomenon whereby some genes preferentially produce mRNA transcripts from the gene copy derived from the parent of a specific sex. It has been implicated in a number of human diseases (most of them of endocrine interest), such as Prader-Willi/Angelman syndromes, Silver-Russell syndrome, Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome, transient neonatal diabetes, the focal form of nesidioblastosis, and pseudohypoparathyroidism. Involvement of imprinted genes affecting birth weight and causing susceptibility to type 1 diabetes is under investigation. Recent knowledge about the varied molecular mechanisms involved will be outlined.
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PMID:Parental genomic imprinting in endocrinopathies. 1244 86

Polyglandular autoimmune syndrome is defined as multiple endocrine gland insufficiencies accompanied by autoimmune diseases of the endocrine and nonendocrine system. After Schmidt introduced a case of nontuberculosis adrenal gland dysfunction with thyroiditis in 1926, Neufeld defined polyglandular autoimmune syndrome by I, II, and III subtypes in 1980 by their presentation of occurrence age, heredity methods, relationship with human leukocyte antigen, and accompanying diseases. We report a case of a 32-year-old female with polyglandular autoimmune syndrome III accompanied by type 1 diabetes mellitus that was treated with insulin (36 units per day) for 11 years. She had insulin deficiency and Hashimoto thyroiditis as an autoimmune disorder. In addition, she had several features similar to Albright's hereditary osteodystrophy including short stature, truncal obesity, round face, short neck, low intelligence (full IQ 84), and decreased memory. Although Albright's hereditary osteodystrophy is morphological evidence of pseudohypoparathyroidism or pseudopseudohypoparathyroidism, she had primary hypoparathyroidism on laboratory results. Here, we report a case of polyglandular autoimmune syndrome III with type 1 diabetes mellitus, autoimmune thyroiditis, and primary hypoparathyroidism, accompanied by clinical features similar to Albright's hereditary osteodystrophy.
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PMID:Polyglandular Autoimmune Syndrome Type III with Primary Hypoparathyroidism. 2439 85