Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0013421 (dystonia)
8,418 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A large German family with "myoclonic dystonia with lightning jerks responsive to alcohol" was identified. Eleven affected pedigree members and six obligate gene carriers from five generations were identified. A description of one branch of this pedigree was published in 1964. Our examination 30 years after the initial report confirms the clinical syndrome of a nonprogressive movement disorder characterized by myoclonic jerks affecting the proximal muscles and the muscles of the trunk, accompanied by mild dystonic features in some affected family members. Segregation analysis favors autosomal dominant inheritance with high, but incomplete, penetrance in males and much lower penetrance in females. Linkage analysis was performed using simple sequence repeat polymorphisms (CA repeats) closely associated with or spanning the chromosomal regions containing 15 candidate genes: the gene for early-onset generalized torsion dystonia, DYT1 (chromosome 9q34); the genes for subunits alpha 2, beta 1, and gamma 1 (chromosome 4p12-4q13); for alpha 1, alpha 6, beta 2, and gamma 2 (chromosome 5q31.1-5q31.3); for alpha 4, alpha 5, beta 3, and gamma 3 (chromosome 15q11-15q13); for rho 1 and rho 2 (chromosome 6q14-6q21) of the gamma-aminobutyric acid A receptor; and for the alpha subunit of the glycine receptor (chromosome 5q31). By a combination of pairwise and multipoint linkage analysis, it could be excluded that any of these candidate gene-bearing chromosomal regions contain the disease gene in this family. We also excluded major portions of three chromosomal regions syntenic with mouse chromosome 3, which carries the murine beta subunit of the glycine receptor.
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PMID:Linkage studies in alcohol-responsive myoclonic dystonia. 881 14

Small quantities of botulinum toxin (BTX) are useful in the treatment of certain movement disorders, such as laryngeal spasmodic dysphonia, blepharospasm, and cervical dystonia. However, the corrective paralytic effects of BTX are only temporary, in part because of the formation of remodeled neuromuscular junctions. Here, we questioned whether various factors within and near the neuromuscular junction could contribute to the remodeling seen after BTX treatment. BTX was injected subcutaneously in the region of the levator auris longus muscle. At 1-week intervals, levator auris longus muscles were removed and examined histochemically. As previously described, BTX treatment results in a progressive elongation of end plates. The neural cell adhesion molecule was not associated with the elongated end plates but was associated with the BTX-induced nerve sprouts after long intervals (3 to 4 weeks). Similarly, after BTX, laminin-1 (composed of alpha 1, beta 1, and gamma 1 chains) reactivity was associated with the nerve sprouts, but not with the end plates. Laminin beta 2 reactivity at the end plate dispersed somewhat within 1 week but remained diffusely associated with the elongating end plates for up to 5 weeks. Together these results suggest that neural cell adhesion molecule and laminins may participate in the sprouting observed after BTX treatment and that alterations in laminin beta 2 expression may participate in initial loss of contacts.
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PMID:Association of adhesive macromolecules with terminal sprouts at the neuromuscular junction after botulinum treatment. 994 61

Recently, exome sequencing has extended our knowledge of genetic causes of developmental delay through identification of de novo, germline mutations in the guanine nucleotide-binding protein, beta 1 (GNB1) in 13 patients with neurodevelopmental disability and a wide range of additional symptoms and signs including hypotonia in 11 and seizures in 10 of the patients. Limb/arm dystonia was found in 2 patients.(1).
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PMID:Novel GNB1 missense mutation in a patient with generalized dystonia, hypotonia, and intellectual disability. 2766 84