Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0012872 (DNA marker)
929 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is an hereditary degenerative disease of the retina and a major cause of visual impairment, prevalence estimates ranging from 1 in 3000 to 1 in 7000. The condition may segregate as an autosomal dominant, autosomal recessive or an X-linked recessive trait and it may also occur on a sporadic basis in up to 50% of cases. In the autosomal dominant form, close linkage to the DNA marker C17 (D3S47) was recently established in a large family of Irish origin displaying early-onset disease (McWilliam et al. 1989), multipoint analysis indicating the gene for rhodopsin as a likely candidate (Farrar et al. 1990). In that gene, a C----A transversion in codon 23, resulting in a proline----histidine substitution has now been identified in 17 of 148 unrelated ADRP patients in the United States (Dryja et al. 1990). This mutation is absent however in the original Irish pedigree (it is also absent in 21 other dominant Irish pedigrees, representing approximately 70% of the estimated ADRP population) indicating that another mutation, either in rhodopsin itself, or in a gene very closely linked to rhodopsin is responsible for the disease in that family. Analysis of other dominant pedigrees using the C17 and/or rhodopsin probes has indicated either tight linkage (Bhattacharya, Personal Communication), looser linkage, possibly indicative of a second locus on 3q (Olsson et al. 1990) or no linkage (Farrar et al. 1990, Blanton et al. 1990, Inglehearn et al. 1990). Extensive genetic heterogeneity thus exists in the autosomal dominant form of this disease, and in the light of these new observations, earlier tentative evidence for linkage of ADRP to the Rhesus locus on chromosome 1 will be re-evaluated. A locus for type II Usher syndrome (classical RP combined with congenital pedial deafness, and normal vestibular function) has now been established on the long arm of chromosome 1 (Kimberling et al. 1990). Type I Usher families, in which hearing loss is more profound and vestibular function absent, do not segregate with the same chromosome 1q markers, indicating the existence of another, as yet unlocated gene. In the X-linked form of the disease, two genes, XLRP2 and XLRP3, have been located on the proximal short arm of the X chromosome using a combination of physical and linkage mapping techniques, and there is some evidence to suggest a possible third locus more distally located.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Retinitis pigmentosa: genetic mapping in X-linked and autosomal forms of the disease. 220 66

A parallel-group, double-blind, randomised study was performed to establish the effect of the vitamin D3 analogue KH 1060, in an ointment versus vehicle only, on the epidermal cell characteristics of chronic idiopathic lichen planus; KH 1060 also has marked immunosuppressive activity. A group of 10 patients were treated for 8 weeks with either KH 1060 ointment or vehicle only. In addition to the assessment of clinical scores, keratotome biopsies were taken before and after 8 weeks' treatment. Epidermal cell suspensions were prepared with trypsin and the suspensions incubated with TO-PRO-3 (DNA marker), RKSE 60 (marker for keratin 10-positive cells) and antivimentin (marker for all non-keratinocytes). In nine of the 10 patients, keratotome biopsies were obtained both before and after 8 weeks treatment. The vehicle alone had no significant effect on the clinical severity scores or epidermal cell characteristics. In contrast, the KH 1060 ointment resulted in a statistically significant reduction in the percentage of cells in S- and G2M phase and the percentage of vimentin-positive cells, but it did not affect the percentage of keratin 10-positive cells.
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PMID:The epidermis of chronic idiopathic lichen planus during topical treatment with the vitamin D3 analogue KH 1060. 966 2