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:C0011860 (
type 2 diabetes
)
57,723
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We investigated a family in which at least 4 men in 3 generations had a syndrome of obesity,
mild mental retardation
, delayed puberty, macroorchidism, acanthosis nigricans, hyperinsulinemia, and later overt insulin-resistant diabetes mellitus (non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus,
NIDDM
). The patients have markedly curly scalp hair, deficient face and body hair. Their teeth were healthy and normal in size and position. The clinical and biochemical findings and characteristics of the insulin receptors investigated in fibroblasts are reported. There was normal insulin binding to fibroblasts in the 2 brothers and their father. However, insulin-stimulated RNA synthesis was decreased as compared to that of normal control individuals. These findings suggest a postbinding defect of insulin action. The pedigree documents an autosomal dominant mode of inheritance. The diagnosis is of practical importance since it enables medical supervision of gene carriers in a preclinical state of atherosclerotic complications and overt diabetes. The findings in this family have relevance also to the explanation of familial
mild mental retardation
and to the study of different forms of insulin resistance due to a disturbance in biosignal transfer.
...
PMID:Autosomal dominant insulin resistance syndrome due to postbinding defect. 128 80
We report on a previously undescribed combination of endocrine and neuroectodermal abnormalities in four sibs from Burma. These abnormalities include low growth hormone levels in response to provocative stimuli, delayed puberty associated with prepubertal levels of gonadotropins in the males and pubertal levels of gonadotropins in the females,
type II diabetes mellitus
with elevated insulin levels,
mild mental retardation
, sensori-neural deafness, and alopecia without pili torti. They also had a characteristic facial appearance and fleshy hands and feet. This family appears to have a previously undescribed combination of endocrine and neuroectodermal abnormalities.
...
PMID:Familial syndrome of endocrine and neuroectodermal abnormalities. 144 93
HNF1B encodes for a transcription factor involved in the early development of the kidney, pancreas, liver and genital tract. Mutations in HNF1B are dominantly inherited and consist of whole-gene deletion, or small mutation. De novo mutation occurs in half of tested kindreds. HNF1B-related disease combines renal and non-renal manifestations. Renal involvement is heterogeneous and may escape early recognition. During fetal life and childhood, it mostly consists of hyperechogenic kidneys or bilateral renal cystic hypodysplasia. The adult phenotype encompasses tubulointerstitial profile at presentation and slowly progressive renal decline (-2 ml/min/year). Renal involvement includes renal cysts (mostly few cortical cysts), a solitary kidney, pelvi-caliceal abnormalities, hypokalemia and hypomagnesemia related to tubular leak, and more rarely, Fanconi syndrome and chromophobe renal carcinoma. The latter warrants ultrasound screening. Extrarenal phenotype consists of diabetes mellitus (
MODY
-5), exocrine pancreas failure and pancreas atrophy; fluctuation liver tests abnormalities; diverse genital tract abnormalities in females or infertility in males; and
mild mental retardation
in rare individuals. Phenotype heterogeneity within families is striking. Individuals progressing to end-stage renal disease are eligible for kidney transplantation (or combined pancreas and kidney transplantation for diabetic individuals). While HNF1B disease was still unknown one decade ago, it has emerged as the second most prevalent dominantly inherited kidney disease. Data available pave the way for early recognition and improved specific management, including genetic counselling.
...
PMID:[HNF1B-related disease: paradigm of a developmental gene and unexpected recognition of a new renal disease]. 2411 77