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Query: UMLS:C0016719 (
Friedreich's ataxia
)
2,098
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Friedreich's ataxia
(FA) is a severe neurodegenerative condition with an incidence of 1:50000 in the European population. In 97% of patients this disease is due to an intronic GAA triplet repeat expansion in the
FRDA
gene resulting in a marked decrease in its expression. The protein encoded by this gene is known as frataxin which is found within the mitochondrion. Upon deletion of the homologous gene (YFH1) in the yeast, there was an accumulation of iron (Fe) within the mitochondrion. When the YFH1 gene was reintroduced back into the yeast cell Fe was exported out of the mitochondrion and into the cytosol. Evidence that human frataxin is also involved in mitochondrial Fe-overload comes from studies in FA patients that have shown an accumulation of Fe within the heart. While the precise role of human frataxin remains to be determined, the molecule appears to be involved indirectly in regulating the export and/or import of mitochondrial Fe. The finding of mitochondrial Fe-overload suggests that the use of specific Fe chelators which can permeate the mitochondrion may have potential in the treatment of this disease.
...
PMID:Frataxin: its role in iron metabolism and the pathogenesis of Friedreich's ataxia. 1116 27
Friedreich's ataxia
is an autosomal recessive neuro-degenerative disorder involving both central and peripheral nervous system. Patients also show a systemic clinical picture presenting heart disease and diabetes mellitus or glucose intolerance. The disease is caused by mutations in the
FRDA
gene mapped on chromosome 9q13. The product of the gene is frataxin, an 18 kDa soluble mitochondrial protein with 210 amino acids. Crystal structure suggests a new, not previously reported, protein fold. The most frequent mutation is the expansion of a GAA trinucleotide repeat located within the first intron of the gene, and represents 98% of the mutations. Point mutations are described in compound heterozygous subjects with one expanded allele. A two-step model of GAA normal alleles towards premutation alleles, which might generate further full expanded mutations in the population with Indo-European ancestry, has been postulated. Clinical phenotype is variable and an inverse correlation with the GAA expansion size has been observed. Analysis of the GAA triplet is a strong molecular tool for clinical diagnosis, genetic counselling and prenatal diagnosis.
Friedreich's ataxia
patho-genesis is not solved yet. Substantial data from organism models, such the S. cerevisae yeast and more recently conditioned knock-outs in mouse, and studies in heart biopsies and fibroblast cultures from patients suggest an important role of mitochondrial iron in the development of the disease. Iron is accumulated in the mitochondrial matrix of both the yeast frataxin deficient mutant and the patient fibroblasts. It has been postulated that iron-induced oxygen radical affects the oxidative phosphorylation in frataxin deficiency states favouring the disease pathology. A second hypothesis postulates a direct role of frataxin in the mitochondrial energy activation and oxidative phosphorylation. Iron chelator drugs and antioxidant drugs have been postulated for Friedreich's treatment. No results from clinical trials are available yet, but idebenone, a short-chain quinone, seems to reduce the size of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and levels of oxidative stress molecules in patients.
...
PMID:Friedreich's ataxia and frataxin: molecular genetics, evolution and pathogenesis (Review). 1135 Dec 69
Friedreich ataxia
is an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorder associated with a GAA repeat expansion in the first intron of the gene (
FRDA
) encoding a novel, highly conserved, 210 amino acid protein known as frataxin. Normal variation in repeat size was determined by analysis of more than 600 DNA samples from seven human populations. This analysis showed that the most frequent allele had nine GAA repeats, and no alleles with fewer than five GAA repeats were found. The European and Syrian populations had the highest percentage of alleles with 10 or more GAA repeats, while the Papua New Guinea population did not have any alleles carrying more than 10 GAA repeats. The distributions of repeat sizes in the European, Syrian, and African American populations were significantly different from those in the Asian and Papua New Guinea populations (p < 0.001). The GAA repeat size was also determined in five nonhuman primates. Samples from 10 chimpanzees, 3 orangutans, 1 gorilla, 1 rhesus macaque, 1 mangabey, and 1 tamarin were analyzed. Among those primates belonging to the Pongidae family, the chimpanzees were found to carry three or four GAA repeats, the orangutans had four or five GAA repeats, and the gorilla carried three GAA repeats. In primates belonging to the Cercopithecidae family, three GAA repeats were found in the mangabey and two in the rhesus macaque. However, an AluY subfamily member inserted in the poly(A) tract preceding the GAA repeat region in the rhesus macaque, making the amplified sequence approximately 300 bp longer. The GAA repeat was also found in the tamarin, suggesting that it arose at least 40 million years ago and remained relatively small throughout the majority of primate evolution, with a punctuated expansion in the human genome.
...
PMID:Phylogenetic analysis of the Friedreich ataxia GAA trinucleotide repeat. 1142 60
DNA repeat expansion is the genetic basis for a growing number of neurological disorders. While the largest subset of these diseases results in an increase in the length of a polyglutamine tract in the protein encoded by the affected gene, the most common form of inherited mental retardation, fragile X syndrome, and the most common inherited ataxia,
Friedreich's ataxia
, are both caused by expansions that are transcribed but not translated. These expansions both decrease expression of the gene in which the expanded repeat is located, but they do so by quite different mechanisms. In fragile X syndrome, CGG. CCG expansion in the 5' untranslated region of the FMR1 gene leads to hypermethylation of the repeats and the adjacent CpG-rich promoter. Methylation prevents the binding of the transcription factor alpha-Pal/NRF-1, and may indirectly affect the binding of other factors via the formation of transcriptionally silent chromatin. In
Friedreich's ataxia
, GAA. TTC expansion in an intron of the
FRDA
gene reduces expression by interfering with transcription elongation. The model that best describes the available data is transcription-driven formation of a transient purine. purine. pyrimidine DNA triplex behind an advancing RNA polymerase. This structure lassoes the RNA polymerase that caused it, trapping the enzyme on the template.
...
PMID:Fragile X syndrome and Friedreich's ataxia: two different paradigms for repeat induced transcript insufficiency. 1171 74
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.
...
PMID:Friedreich ataxia with minimal GAA expansion presenting as adult-onset spastic ataxia. 1180 70
Friedreich Ataxia
(FA) is a neurodegenerative disorder characterised by progressive gait disturbance, dysarthria, dysmetria and other coordination disorders. The genetic defect is represented by an expansion of GAA repeats in the frataxin gene (
FRDA
or X25). Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is a common finding in FA, and it is widely recognised as specific for the diagnosis of disease status. In this study, we report the co-existence, in a 5-year old boy with FA, of a double mutation in two distinct genes [X25 (A allele: 850 triplets; B allele: 1000 triplets), and cardiac troponin T (TNNT2) (287G>A)]. TNNT2 gene mutations have been previously identified in individuals with a familial form of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (FHC), an autosomal dominant inherited disease characterised by unexplained cardiac hypertrophy and high incidence of sudden death. Although we cannot rule out the impact of each gene defect on cardiac morphology, it is of interest that these two mechanisms may be acting in a synergistic fashion to produce the extreme degree of cardiac hypertrophy detected in the child. This is, to our knowledge, the first description of a double gene defect in individuals with FA and FHC.
...
PMID:Co-existence of frataxin and cardiac troponin T gene mutations in a child with Friedreich Ataxia and familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. 1185 53
Friedreich's ataxia
(
FRDA
), an autosomal recessive cardio- and neurodegenerative disease, is caused by low expression of frataxin, a small mitochondrial protein, encoded in the nucleus. At the biochemical level, the lack of frataxin leads to dysregulation of mitochondrial iron homeostasis and oxidative damage, which eventually causes neuronal death. It is, however, still unclear whether frataxin is directly involved in iron binding, since the yeast orthologue, but not the human protein, has been shown to form large aggregates in the presence of large iron excess. We have compared the properties of three proteins from the frataxin family--the bacterial
CyaY
from Escherichia coli, the yeast Yfh1 and human frataxin--as representative of organisms of increasing complexity. We show that the three proteins have the same fold but different thermal stabilities and iron-binding properties. While human frataxin has no tendency to bind iron,
CyaY
forms iron-promoted aggregates with a behaviour similar to that of yeast frataxin. However, aggregation can be competed by chelator agents or by ionic strength. At physiological salt conditions, almost no aggregation is observed. The design of mutants produced to identify the protein surface involved in iron-promoted aggregation allows us to demonstrate that the process is mediated by a negatively charged surface ridge. Mutation of three of these residues is sufficient to convert
CyaY
in a protein with properties similar to those of human frataxin. On the other hand, mutation of the exposed surface of the beta sheet, which contains most of the conserved residues, does not affect aggregation, suggesting that iron binding is a non-conserved part of a more complex cellular function of frataxins.
...
PMID:A structural approach to understanding the iron-binding properties of phylogenetically different frataxins. 1214 Jan 89
Friedreich ataxia
is commonly caused by large expansions of a GAA triplet-repeat (GAA-TR) sequence in the first intron of the
FRDA
gene. We used small-pool PCR to analyze somatic variability among 7190 individual
FRDA
molecules from peripheral blood DNA of subjects carrying 12 different expanded alleles, ranging in size from 241 to 1105 triplets. Expanded alleles showed a length-dependent increase in somatic variability, with mutation loads ranging from 47% to 78%. We noted a strong contraction bias among long alleles (>500 triplets), which showed a 4-fold higher frequency of large contractions versus expansions. Some contractions were very large; of all somatic mutations scored, approximately 5% involved contractions of >50% of the original allele length, and 0.29% involved complete reversion to the normal/premutation length (< or =60 triplets). These observations contrast sharply with the strong expansion bias seen in expanded CTG triplet repeats in myotonic dystrophy. No somatic variability was detected in >6000 individual
FRDA
molecules analyzed from 15 normal alleles (8-25 triplets). A premutation allele with 44 uninterrupted GAA repeats was found to be unstable, ranging in size from 6 to 113 triplets, thus establishing the threshold for somatic instability between 26 and 44 GAA triplets. Analysis of an additional 7850
FRDA
molecules from serially passaged lymphoblastoid cell lines carrying nine expanded alleles (132-933 triplets) showed very low mutation loads, ranging from 0% to 6.2%. Our data indicate that expanded GAA-TR alleles in
Friedreich ataxia
are highly mutable and have a natural tendency to contract in vivo, and that these properties depend on multiple factors, including DNA sequence, triplet-repeat length and unknown cell-type-specific factors.
...
PMID:The GAA triplet-repeat sequence in Friedreich ataxia shows a high level of somatic instability in vivo, with a significant predilection for large contractions. 1218 70
Friedreich's ataxia
(FA) is a severe inherited spinocerebellar ataxia that primarily affects the nervous system and heart leading to early confinement in a wheelchair and death. The gene defective in FA,
FRDA
, encodes a mitochondrial protein known as frataxin. A triplet repeat expansion within intron 1 of the
FRDA
gene results in a marked decrease in frataxin expression. Over the last 5 years it has become clear that this results in mitochondrial iron accumulation that generates oxidative stress and results in damage to critical biological molecules. Drugs that reduce oxidative stress have a limited effect on the progression and pathology of the disease, probably because these agents cannot remove the iron accumulation. In this review, the potential of iron chelators, namely the 2-pyridylcarboxaldehyde isonicotinoyl hydrazone (PCIH) analogues, as agents to remove mitochondrial iron deposits is discussed. These ligands have been specifically designed to enter and target mitochondrial iron pools, which is a property lacking in desferrioxamine, the only chelator in widespread clinical use. This latter drug may not have any beneficial effect in FA patients, probably because of its hydrophilicity that prevents mitochondrial access. Indeed, standard chelation regimens will probably not work in FA, as these patients do not exhibit gross iron-loading. Considering that there is no effective treatment for FA, it is essential that the therapeutic potential of iron chelators that target mitochondrial iron pools is assessed experimentally.
...
PMID:Friedreich's ataxia: iron chelators that target the mitochondrion as a therapeutic strategy? 1255 17
Inherited deficiency of the mitochondrial protein frataxin causes neural and cardiac cell degeneration, and
Friedreich's ataxia
. Five hypotheses for frataxin's mitochondrial function have been generated, largely from work in non-human cells: iron transporter, iron-sulfur cluster assembler, iron-storage protein, antioxidant and stimulator of oxidative phosphorylation. We analyzed gene expression in three human cell types using microarrays, and identified just 48 transcripts whose expression was significantly frataxin-dependent in at least two cell types. Significant decreases in seven transcripts occurred in the sulfur amino acid (SAA) biosynthetic pathway and the iron-sulfur cluster (ISC) biosynthetic pathway to which it is connected. By contrast, we did not observe a single frataxin-dependent transcript that fits with the other four current hypotheses. Quantitative reverse-transcriptase PCR analysis of ISC-S and rhodanese transcripts confirmed that the expression of these genes involved in ISC metabolism was lower in mutants. Amino acid analysis confirmed the defect in SAA metabolism: homocystine, cysteine, cystathionine and serine were significantly decreased in frataxin-deficient cell extracts and mitochondria. An ISC defect was further confirmed by observing decreases in succinate dehydrogenase and aconitase activities, whose activities require ISCs. The ISC-U scaffold protein was specifically decreased in frataxin-deficient cells, suggesting a role for frataxin in its expression or maintenance, and sodium sulfide partially rescued the oxidant-sensitivity of the
FRDA
cells. Also, multiple transcripts involved in the Fas/TNF/INF apoptosis pathway were up-regulated in frataxin-deficient cells, consistent with a multi-step mechanism of
Friedreich's ataxia
pathophysiology, and suggesting alternative possibilities for therapeutic intervention.
...
PMID:Decreased expression of genes involved in sulfur amino acid metabolism in frataxin-deficient cells. 1283 93
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