Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019158 (hepatitis)
30,205 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Type II citrullinaemia (CTLN2) is an adult- or late childhood-onset liver disease characterized by a liver-specific defect in argininosuccinate synthetase protein. The enzyme abnormality is caused by deficiency of the protein citrin, which is encoded by the SLC25A 13 gene. Until now, however, few cases with SLC25A13 mutations have been reported in children with liver disease. We describe an infant who presented with neonatal hepatitis in association with hypergalactosaemia detected by neonatal mass screening. DNA analysis of SLC25A13 revealed that the patient was homozygous for a IVS11+1G>A mutation. This case suggests that SLC25A13 mutant should be suspected in neonatal patients with hypergalactosaemia of unknown cause.
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PMID:Type II citrullinaemia (citrin deficiency) in a neonate with hypergalactosaemia detected by mass screening. 1199 83

By using homozygosity mapping and positional cloning, we have shown that adult-onset type II citrullinemia (CTLN2) is caused by mutations of the SLC25A13 gene, which is localized on chromosome 7q21.3 and encodes a mitochondrial solute carrier protein named citrin. So far, we have reported nine mutations, most of which cause loss of citrin, and we have established several methods for DNA diagnosis. These methods have shown that more than 90% of the patients diagnosed as suffering from CTLN2 by enzymatic analysis carry SLC25A13 mutations in both alleles, indicating that CTLN2 is caused by citrin deficiency. Furthermore, by using the same DNA diagnosis methods, we discovered that 70 neonates or infants suffering from a particular type of neonatal hepatitis carry the same SLC25A13 mutations. Since the symptoms of the neonates are different from those of the more severe CTLN2 and usually ameliorate without special treatment, we designated the neonatal disease neonatal intrahepatic cholestasis caused by citrin deficiency (NICCD). We conclude that citrin deficiency causes NICCD in neonates and CTLN2 in adults through the additional effects of genetic or environmental modifiers. Since the function of citrin, together with that of an isoform, aralar, was found to be as a mitochondrial aspartate glutamate carrier, the various symptoms of NICCD and CTLN2 may be understood as caused by defective aspartate export from the mitochondria to the cytosol and defects in the malate aspartate shuttle. It is, however, still difficult to understand the cause of the hepatic deficiency of argininosuccinate synthetase protein in CTLN2.
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PMID:Mitochondrial aspartate glutamate carrier (citrin) deficiency as the cause of adult-onset type II citrullinemia (CTLN2) and idiopathic neonatal hepatitis (NICCD). 1211 66