Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0014848 (achalasia)
2,804 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The triple A or Allgrove's syndrome (MIM*231550) is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by the triad of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) resistant adrenal insufficiency, achalasia and alacrima. Since its first description by Allgrove et al. (1978) more than 70 cases from all over the world have been reported. The syndrome manifests itself during the first decade of life with severe hypoglycaemic episodes which can cause sudden death. The frequent association with neurological disorders presenting as a mixed pattern of upper and lower motor neuropathy, sensory impairment, autonomic neuropathy and mental retardation may result in a severely disabling disease. As an additional feature some patients have hyperkeratosis of their palms and soles. We have performed a systematic genome linkage scan in eight triple A families of which three were consanguineous [including the large highly inbred kindred described by Moore et al. (1991)]. We obtained conclusive evidence for linkage of the triple A syndrome locus to markers on chromosome 12q13 (D12S368, theta max = 0, Zmax = 10.81) with no indication of genetic heterogeneity. Haplotype and multipoint analyses suggest that the gene is located on a chromosomal segment flanked by the markers D12S1629 and D12S312 which are 6 cM apart. This region harbors the type II keratin gene cluster, and potential candidate genes include SCN8A and HOXC genes.
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PMID:Linkage of the gene for the triple A syndrome to chromosome 12q13 near the type II keratin gene cluster. 896 64

Triple A syndrome (Allgrove syndrome, MIM No. 231550) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterised by ACTH-resistant adrenal insufficiency, achalasia of the cardia, and alacrimia. The triple A gene has been previously mapped to chromosome 12q13 in a maximum interval of 6 cM between loci D12S1629 and D12S312. Using linkage analysis in 12 triple A families, mostly originating from North Africa, we confirm that the disease locus maps to the 12q13 region (Zmax = 10.89 at theta = 0 for D12S1604) and suggest that triple A is a genetically homogeneous disorder. Recombination events as well as homozygosity for polymorphic markers enabled us to reduce the genetic interval to a 3.9 cM region. Moreover, total linkage disequilibrium was found at the D12S1604 locus between a rare allele and the mutant chromosomes in North African patients. Analysis of markers at five contiguous loci showed that most of the triple A chromosomes are derived from a single founder chromosome. As all markers are located in a 0 cM genetic interval and only allele 5 at the D12S1604 locus was conserved in mutant chromosomes, we speculate that the triple A mutation is due to an ancient Arabian founder effect that occurred before migration to North Africa. Since we also found linkage disequilibrium at D12S1604 in two patients from Southern Europe (France and Spain), the founder effect might well extend to other Mediterranean countries. Taking advantage of a YAC contig encompassing the triple A minimal physical region, the triple A gene was mapped to a 1.7 Mb DNA fragment accessible to gene cloning.
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PMID:Linkage disequilibrium in inbred North African families allows fine genetic and physical mapping of triple A syndrome. 1095 24