Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0013362 (dysarthria)
3,768 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Friedreich ataxia is an autosomal recessive ataxia with onset usually before puberty whose characteristic clinical features include progressive ataxia of gait and limbs, dysarthria, loss of joint position and vibratory sense, absent knee and ankle jerks, and Babinski signs. Foot deformity, scoliosis, diabetes mellitus, and cardiac involvement are common and characteristic. Patients survive until about age 30 years although longer survivals occur. A later onset, more slowly progressive form seems to be an allelic variant. The basic process seems to be a dying-back of neuronal processes. Using linkage mapping techniques, the classical form of Friedreich ataxia has been localized to 9q13-q21, a region on the long arm of chromosome 9. Haplotype analysis, analysis of recombinants, and physical mapping techniques, including construction of a YAC contig, have narrowed the interval for the Friedreich ataxia gene, FRDA, to a few hundred thousand base pairs. Candidate genes in the region are being studied by techniques of mutation analysis. It is likely that the Freidreich ataxia gene will be cloned soon. A condition resembling Friedreich ataxia with decreased vitamin E levels has been localized to chromosome 8 and is discussed elsewhere.
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PMID:Friedreich ataxia. 761 92

The onset of Friedreich ataxia (FA) was before 10 years of age in 36 out of 95 personally observed patients. We studied the clinical and laboratory findings of these childhood onset patients. Mean onset age +/- SD was 6.3 +/- 2.4 years. Gait and stance ataxia and lower limb areflexia were constant, dysmetria, dysarthria, Babinski sign, pes cavus, scoliosis and decreased vibration sense were present in the majority of patients. Higher occurrence of diabetes in childhood onset cases (25%) was the only statistical difference in comparison with later onset patients. Mean onset age of diabetes was 21.1 +/- 6.9 years and all patients required insulin. ECG was abnormal in 72% of the patients and echocardiographic evidence of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy was found in 43%. Linkage analysis, performed in 10 families, showed no recombination between the polymorphic markers of the 9q13-21.1 region and the disease locus with a peak lod score of 4.21 at a recombination fraction = 0.00.
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PMID:Childhood onset of Friedreich ataxia: a clinical and genetic study of 36 cases. 867 22

Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) is a common autosomal recessive degenerative disease (1/50,000 live births) characterized by a progressive-gait and limb ataxia with lack of tendon reflexes in the legs, dysarthria and pyramidal weakness of the inferior limbs. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is observed in most FRDA patients. The gene associated with the disease has been mapped to chromosome 9q13 (ref. 3) and encodes a 210-amino-acid protein, frataxin. FRDA is caused primarily by a GAA repeat expansion within the first intron of the frataxin gene, which accounts for 98% of mutant alleles. The function of the protein is unknown, but an increased iron content has been reported in hearts of FRDA patients and in mitochondria of yeast strains carrying a deleted frataxin gene counterpart (YFH1), suggesting that frataxin plays a major role in regulating mitochondrial iron transport. Here, we report a deficient activity of the iron-sulphur (Fe-S) cluster-containing subunits of mitochondrial respiratory complexes I, II and III in the endomyocardial biopsy of two unrelated FRDA patients. Aconitase, an iron-sulphur protein involved in iron homeostasis, was found to be deficient as well. Moreover, disruption of the YFH1 gene resulted in multiple Fe-S-dependent enzyme deficiencies in yeast. The deficiency of Fe-S-dependent enzyme activities in both FRDA patients and yeast should be related to mitochondrial iron accumulation, especially as Fe-S proteins are remarkably sensitive to free radicals. Mutated frataxin triggers aconitase and mitochondrial Fe-S respiratory enzyme deficiency in FRDA, which should therefore be regarded as a mitochondrial disorder.
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PMID:Aconitase and mitochondrial iron-sulphur protein deficiency in Friedreich ataxia. 932 46

We describe three siblings from an Italian family affected by an autosomal recessive spinocerebellar degeneration. Gait ataxia, presenting between 38 and 45 years, was the first symptom in all three patients. Dysarthria, dysmetria, brisk tendon reflexes, extensor plantar response, and scoliosis were constant features. Disease progression was slow. Electrophysiologic studies demonstrated a slight reduction in sural nerve sensory action potential in only one patient. Analysis of GAA expansion within the X25 gene showed that patients were homozygous for the expansion, with the shorter expanded allele ranging from 120 to 156 triplets. The size of the GAA expansion may be smaller than we previously described. Such minimal expansions may result in atypical forms of Friedreich's ataxia.
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PMID:Broadened Friedreich's ataxia phenotype after gene cloning. Minimal GAA expansion causes late-onset spastic ataxia. 940 56

Friedreich's ataxia is an autosomal recessively inherited neurodegenerative disorder caused by expansions of an unstable GAA trinucleotide repeat in the STM7/X25 gene on chromosome 9q. We studied the (GAA)n polymorphism in 178 healthy controls and 102 patients with idiopathic ataxia. The repeat size ranged from 7 to 29 (GAA)n motifs on normal chromosomes and from 66 to 1360 trinucleotide repetitions in Friedreich's ataxia patients. Meiotic instability of expanded alleles was observed without significant differences in maternal and paternal transmissions. Thirty-six of 102 patients were typed homozygous for expanded (GAA)n alleles. Twenty-seven of these presented with the typical Friedreich's ataxia symptoms and nine patients with an atypical Friedreich's ataxia phenotype. Before molecular genetic diagnosis had been performed seven of these patients had been classified as early onset cerebellar ataxia and two as idiopathic sporadic cerebellar ataxia of late onset. In contrast, in one family with typical Friedreich's ataxia phenotype we did not find an expanded allele; this suggests that there can be either point mutations in the X25 gene on both chromosomes or locus heterogeneity in Friedreich's ataxia. The phenotypic spectrum of Friedreich's ataxia is much broader than considered before. Early onset, areflexia, extensor plantar responses and reduced vibration sense should no longer be considered essential diagnostic criteria of Friedreich's ataxia. In comparison with the non-Friedreich's ataxia group hypertrophic cardiomyopathy seems to be the only symptom specific for Friedreich's ataxia. However, it is not obligatory. The phenotype is significantly influenced by the number of GAA repeats with close genotype-phenotype relationships when the smaller of the two alleles is considered. Repeat length correlated inversely with age at onset, onset of dysarthria and progression rate. In conclusion, molecular genetic analysis appears mandatory for the diagnosis and genetic counselling of Friedreich's ataxia. The molecular genetic test should be applied not only to patients with typical Friedreich's ataxia phenotype but also in all cases of idiopathic autosomal recessive or sporadic ataxia.
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PMID:Friedreich's ataxia. Revision of the phenotype according to molecular genetics. 944 68

Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) is an autosomal recessive, neurodegenerative disease, characterized by progressive gait and limb ataxia, dysarthria, lower-limb areflexia, Babinski sign, loss of position and vibration senses, cardiomyopathy, and carbohydrate intolerance. It is the most common inherited ataxia, and is associated with a GAA triplet repeat expansion in the first intron of the X25 gene on the long arm of chromosome 9. We present a case whose clinical diagnosis was initially confounded by the mildness of the ataxic phenotype and a family history of multiple sclerosis. Evaluation of the X25 gene revealed that the patient was homozygous for the GAA triplet repeat expansion, pathognomonic of FRDA. Investigation of her sural nerve biopsy revealed a significantly smaller expansion size, constituting the first direct demonstration of somatic mosaicism involving the nervous system in FRDA. We speculate that a similar contraction in pathologically affected tissues could be the molecular basis for the mildness of the ataxia.
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PMID:A mild case of Friedreich ataxia: lymphocyte and sural nerve analysis for GAA repeat length reveals somatic mosaicism. 948 68

Friedreich's ataxia is the most common inherited ataxia. Ninety-six percent of patients are homozygous for GAA trinucleotide repeat expansions in the first intron of the frataxin gene. The remaining cases are compound heterozygotes for a GAA expansion and a frataxin point mutation. We report here the identification of 10 novel frataxin point mutations, and the detection of a previously described mutation (G130V) in two additional families. Most truncating mutations were in exon 1. All missense mutations were in the last three exons coding for the mature frataxin protein. The clinical features of 25 patients with identified frataxin point mutations were compared with those of 196 patients homozygous for the GAA expansion. A similar phenotype resulted from truncating mutations and from missense mutations in the carboxy-terminal half of mature frataxin, suggesting that they cause a comparable loss of function. In contrast, the only two missense mutations located in the amino-terminal half of mature frataxin (D122Y and G130V) cause an atypical and milder clinical presentation (early-onset spastic gait with slow disease progression, absence of dysarthria, retained or brisk tendon reflexes, and mild or no cerebellar ataxia), suggesting that they only partially affect frataxin function. The incidence of optic disk pallor was higher in compound heterozygotes than in expansion homozygotes, which might correlate with a very low residual level of normal frataxin produced from the expanded allele.
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PMID:Friedreich's ataxia: point mutations and clinical presentation of compound heterozygotes. 998 22

Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA) is the most frequent cause of recessive ataxias. Neurological examination shows oculo-motor ataxia, dysarthria, limbs ataxia, tendon areflexia, pyramidal signs and sensory deficits. Extra-neurological involvement consists in osteoarticular deformities, cardiomyopathy and diabetes mellitus. Neurological deficits and osteoarticular deformities both contribute to the gait disorder, which is the main disabling deficit. In 98% of the cases, a trinucleotide repeat is found in chromosome 9. Gene implicated in FRDA codes for a protein called frataxin. Experimental studies have revealed iron accumulation in mitochondria of neurons and cardiomyocytes, suggesting that frataxin plays a determinant role in intramitochondrial iron homeostasis. These discoveries are now considered as a clue for new strategies of treatment in this hereditary disease.
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PMID:[Friedreich's ataxia: recent developments and prospects for treatment]. 1033

We describe two sisters with early onset gait ataxia, rapid disease progression, absent or very mild dysarthria and upper limb dysmetria, retained knee jerks in one, slight to moderate peripheral nerve involvement, and diabetes. Molecular analysis showed that they are compound heterozygotes for GAA expansion and a novel exon 5a missense mutation (R165P). This mutation appears to be associated with an atypical but not milder Friedreich ataxia phenotype.
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PMID:Atypical Friedreich ataxia phenotype associated with a novel missense mutation in the X25 gene. 1066 23

Around a quarter of Friedreich ataxia (FA) patients, despite being homozygous for GAA expansion within the FRDA gene, show atypical presentations. Our aim is to describe the case of three brothers with long-term follow-up suffering from late onset FA manifested with spastic ataxia. The three patients belong to a family with occipital dysplasia (OD) and Chiari I malformation previously reported by us. We have carried out serial examinations since 1977. Electrophysiological and neuroimaging studies, and molecular genetic analyses of hereditary ataxias are available in all three patients. Onset of symptoms occurred between 25 and 35 years. The clinical picture consisted of progressive spastic gait, truncal and limb ataxia, dysarthria, nystagmus, hyperreflexia with knee and ankle clonus and extensor plantar response, and mild hypopallesthesia. Ages at present vary between 50 and 59. One patient is wheelchair-bound but the other two are able to walk with support. Leaving OD aside, skeletal anomalies are not prominent. All three patients showed cardiomyopathy. MR imaging revealed atrophy of the cerebellum and spinal cord. Motor and sensory nerve conduction velocities were normal. Central conduction time of both motor and sensory pathways was delayed or unobtainable. All three patients were homozygous for the GAA expansion, the smaller expanded allele ranging between 131 and 156 repeats. Four heterozygotic carriers were detected among non-ataxic relatives including one with OD; furthermore, an asymptomatic OD patient showed normal genotype. We conclude that adult onset spastic ataxia is a distinctive FA phenotype associated with minimal GAA expansion. This phenotype represents a new cause of selective distal degeneration of central sensory axons. The present concurrence of OD and FA reflects coincidental cosegregation of two different inherited disorders.
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PMID:Friedreich ataxia with minimal GAA expansion presenting as adult-onset spastic ataxia. 1180 70


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