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)

Expression of the erythrocyte complement receptor (C3bR = CR1 = CD35) and its genomic polymorphism (HindIII RFLP) was studied in a group of 80 patients with IDDM, 31 healthy siblings and 101 healthy blood donors. Defective CR1 expression was found in 26% of the patients with IDDM compared with 9% of the controls (P less than 0.05) and 0% of the siblings. The CR1 gene polymorphism of the IDDM patients did not significantly differ from that of the controls. The presence of a 6.9 kb (L) CR1 gene fragment was associated with a low CR1 expression in the patients (P less than 0.05) and especially in the controls (P less than 0.001). No significant association was found between the presence or absence of the HLA risk antigens for IDDM and CR1 expression. The results confirm that erythrocyte CR1 expression is genetically determined, but the CR1 deficiency associated with IDDM seems to be an acquired rather than a genetic phenomenon.
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PMID:Normal C3b receptor (CR1) genomic polymorphism in patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM): is the low erythrocyte CR1 expression an acquired phenomenon? 135 45

Population studies have suggested an increased frequency of small DNA insertions (class I alleles) 5' to the insulin gene in insulin dependent (type I) diabetes mellitus (IDDM). The present study examined this relationship within families. Forty-one families with at least one diabetic offspring were studied. Analysis of the insulin gene polymorphism was performed by digestion of DNA with Bg1I, SstI, RsaI, or PvuII and hybridisation with an insulin gene probe or polymorphic region specific probes. An increased frequency of class I alleles was found among the parents of diabetics (p = 0.02), as well as a trend towards increased frequency of parents homozygous for class I alleles and matings of two homozygous subjects. This increased homozygosity for class I alleles was present in non-diabetic sibs as well (p = 0.01). These results show that ascertainment through an offspring with IDDM selects for families with high frequencies of homozygosity for the class I allele and thus suggests that the insulin gene polymorphism is indeed providing part of the genetic predisposition to IDDM. When the major portion of genetic predisposition is provided by other genes (estimates are that HLA accounts for 30 to 70% in IDDM), identification of additional susceptibility genes becomes difficult. Even when formal linkage analysis is uninformative, our studies indicate that analysis for aggregation of specific alleles within families is a useful approach to this problem.
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PMID:The aggregation of the 5' insulin gene polymorphism in insulin dependent (type I) diabetes mellitus families. 135 34

In this study we report, for the first time, the molecular analysis of HLA-DR and DQ gene frequencies in a large cohort of well-characterized type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus (IDDM) patients (n = 72), and ethnically matched controls (n = 59) collected in sub-Saharan Africa. High molecular mass DNA was prepared and analysed in Southern blots and by oligonucleotide typing. We have shown a strong positive association between IDDM and the Asp 57- DQB1 allele *0201 (DQw2). A rare DR4, DQw2 haplotype was also identified at high frequency in the IDDM cohort. We can now confirm that the association between Asp 57- DQB1 alleles and IDDM, previously reported in ethnically diverse cohorts collected in Western Europe, North America, and South Asia, is also present in an IDDM cohort collected in Africa.
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PMID:Identification of genetic susceptibility loci for insulin-dependent diabetes in Sudan. 135 6

Atherosclerosis, presenting as macrovascular complications of diabetes mellitus, produces approximately 80% of all diabetic mortality, whether the patient has Type I insulin-dependent diabetes (IDDM) or Type II non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). Specifically, 75% of this atherosclerotic macrovascular mortality flows as the outcome of coronary atherosclerosis, which is increased approximately two-fold in men and four-fold in women with diabetes as compared with otherwise matched populations with entirely normal carbohydrate tolerance. The remaining 25% of this atherosclerotic mortality in patients with diabetes mellitus is the result either of accelerated cerebrovascular or of peripheral vascular complications of diabetes, both of which are increased four-fold and five-fold, respectively, in patients with diabetes mellitus, regardless of type. Furthermore, atherosclerosis is the principal cause of hospitalizations for patients with diabetes mellitus. Admissions for this complication account for approximately 77% of total hospitalizations for diabetes owing to complications. Aside from mortality data alone, atherosclerosis is obviously a leading cause of diabetic disability, since it produces patients who are chronic cardiovascular, peripheral or cerebrovascular cripples, perhaps for many years before their ultimate demise. Small blood vessel or microvascular complications of diabetes mellitus, while formerly thought to be the end-stage in the unfolding of the diabetic process, do not appear to have the potential for mortality as do the atherosclerotic large blood vessel complications.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effective treatment of hypertension in patients with diabetes mellitus. 135 76

The genes located between class II and class I HLA genes including polymorphic tumour necrosis factor (TNF) genes may contribute to the disease susceptibility in IDDM. Restriction fragment polymorphisms of the TNF-beta gene have been found to be fixed in the major IDDM susceptibility haplotypes, the B62,DR4 haplotype being associated with the 10.5-kb fragment and the B8,DR3 haplotype with a 5.5-kb fragment. We studied this TNF polymorphism in a sample of diabetic families. In all IDDM-associated haplotypes (n = 129) the 5.5-kb allele was more frequent than in haplotypes found only in healthy family members (n = 112) (58.1% versus 40.2%, P < 0.01). Among IDDM haplotypes the B62,DR4 haplotype was characterized by the 10.5-kb TNF fragment, whereas two other common Finnish IDDM-associated DR4 haplotypes--A24,B39,DR4 and A2,B56,DR4--had the 5.5-kb TNF fragment. Both IDDM-associated and non-associated DR3 positive haplotypes were linked to the 5.5-kb fragment. The distribution of various combinations of TNF alleles in IDDM probands (n = 63) did not differ from that expected according to the Hardy-Weinberg distribution. Our results indicate that the 10.5-kb allele of TNF-beta gene as such is not a risk factor contributing to DR4/DQ8-associated susceptibility. Alternatively, there may be heterogeneity in pathogenetic effector mechanisms.
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PMID:Tumour necrosis factor-beta gene RFLP alleles in Finnish IDDM haplotypes. The Childhood Diabetes in Finland (DiMe) Study Group. 136 Oct 76

Calcitonin concentration (CT) was measured in 52 children with insulin-dependent diabetes (IDDM). All the patients studied were divided into three groups. The first group consisted of children with freshly diagnosed diabetes remaining in the condition of ketonemic acidosis. The second group was composed of children with the well controlled diabetes during the first two years od duration of the disease. The third group included the patients with poorly controlled diabetes of the duration longer than ten years having the accompanying vascular complications. The control values were determined in children without metabolic disturbances of either diabetic or other origin. CT concentration was significantly elevated both in the patients of the first group and those of the third group. In the second group the concentration of this hormone was close to normal. It is known that calcitonin participates in the homeostasis of calcium and is an important regulator of insulin secretion. The results obtained suggest that calcitonin may play a role both in the pathogenesis of diabetes and in developing of diabetic osteopenia.
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PMID:[Level of calcitonin in blood serum of children with insulin dependent diabetes]. 136 94

We investigated whether zincuria is associated with microalbuminuria in type I (insulin-dependent) diabetics (IDDM). In 169 IDDM, 215 overnight urine samples were collected for simultaneous assay of zinc and albumin. In 76 samples with excessive microalbuminuria (greater than 15 mg/L), zincuria was higher than in the 139 other samples (0.83 +/- 0.06 vs 0.58 +/- 0.03 mg/L p less than 0.001), though zincuria and microalbuminuria were not significantly correlated. An exercise provocation test was performed in 78 IDDM. Although microalbuminuria increased, zincuria did not change during the test. Another group of 83 IDDM underwent urinary zinc determination over a period of 1 h of recumbency. The 48 patients who had a zincuria higher than the mean + 2 SD of control values had higher microalbuminuria at rest (48 +/- 16 micrograms/min vs 12 +/- 2 p less than 0.01) and after exercise (111 +/- 33 vs 42 +/- 14 p less than 0.02) than the remaining 35 subjects. Both subgroups did not differ for zinc intake and zincemia. Thus, incipient nephropathy as detected by the measurement of microalbuminuria is associated with a highly significant increase in zinc excretion, which is not proportional to albumin leakage, nor is it amplified during exercise. Hyperzincuria is not explained by an increase in zinc intake and does not result in hypozincemia.
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PMID:Urinary zinc and its relationships with microalbuminuria in type I diabetics. 137 72

The Zn/Cu ratio was examined in the serum of three groups of persons: healthy volunteers, diabetic patients on diabetic diet (NIDDM), and diabetic patients on diabetic diet and insulin (IDDM). Zinc, copper, the Zn/Cu serum ratio, and the blood glucose level were determined during fasting and 2 h after breakfast. Zn and Cu serum levels in NIDDM and IDDM patients were decreased. The Zn/Cu ratio was higher in both groups of diabetic patients. These changes in the Zn and Cu levels as well as in the Zn/Cu ratio were not related to chronic diabetic complications.
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PMID:Zinc and copper in the serum of diabetic patients. 137 73

Zinc status was assessed in 53 diabetic patients: 18 insulin-dependent diabetic patients (IDDM), 22 noninsulin-dependent diabetic patients (NIDDM) treated with oral antidiabetic agents, and 13 insulin-treated, noninsulin-dependent diabetic patients (IRDM). Plasma zinc concentrations were in the usual range for healthy subjects in these three groups (15.3 +/- 0.9 mumol/L). Urinary zinc excretions were elevated in the IDDM group (18.3 +/- 4.1 mumol/24 h; p less than 0.01 vs normal) and in the NIDDM group (17.5 +/- 3.5 mumol/24 h; p less than 0.01 vs normal), but normal in the IRDM group (11.3 +/- 2.4 mumol/24 h). In 14 NIDDM patients treated with transient continuous sc insulin injections, urinary zinc decreased from 16.5 +/- 2.2 mumol/24 h before insulin treatment to 11.5 +/- 0.3 mumol/24 h after insulin treatment without any modification in plasma zinc concentrations.
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PMID:Effects of diabetes type and treatment on zinc status in diabetes mellitus. 137 71

The autoimmune phenomena associated with destruction of the beta cell in pancreatic islets and development of type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus (IDDM) include circulating islet cell antibodies. We have immortalized peripheral blood lymphocytes from prediabetic individuals and patients with newly diagnosed IDDM by Epstein-Barr virus transformation. IgG-positive cells were selected by anti-human IgG-coupled magnetic beads and expanded in cell culture. Supernatants were screened for cytoplasmic islet cell antibodies using the conventional indirect immunofluorescence test on cryostat sections of human pancreas. Six islet cell-specific B-cell lines, originating from a patient with newly diagnosed IDDM, could be stabilized on a monoclonal level. All six monoclonal islet cell antibodies (MICA 1-6) were of the IgG class. None of the MICA reacted with human thyroid, adrenal gland, anterior pituitary, liver, lung, stomach, and intestine tissues but all six reacted with pancreatic islets of different mammalian species and, in addition, with neurons of rat cerebellar cortex. MICA 1-6 were shown to recognize four distinct antigenic epitopes in islets. Islet cell antibody-positive diabetic sera but not normal human sera blocked the binding of the monoclonal antibodies to their target epitopes. Immunoprecipitation of 35S-labeled human islet cell extracts revealed that a protein of identical size to the enzyme glutamate decarboxylase (EC 4.1.1.15) was a target of all MICA. Furthermore, antigen immunotrapped by the MICA from brain homogenates showed glutamate decarboxylase enzyme activity. MICA 1-6 therefore reveal glutamate decarboxylase as the predominant target antigen of cytoplasmic islet cell autoantibodies in a patient with newly diagnosed IDDM.
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PMID:Human monoclonal islet cell antibodies from a patient with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus reveal glutamate decarboxylase as the target antigen. 138 89


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