Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (hepatomegaly)
5,798 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 2.5-year-old girl who presented with abdominal distension, hepatomegaly, coarse facies, hirsutism and contraction deformities was investigated for mucopolysaccharidoses. Urinary excretion showed increased total glycosaminoglycans (105 mg/mmol creatinine; normal for age 9-20 mg/mmol) with marked increases of dermatan and heparan sulphates. A number of lysosomal enzyme activities were measured on leucocytes, serum and cultured fibroblasts. Normal or high activities were found for alpha-iduronidase, N-acetylgalactosamine-6-sulphatase, beta-galactosidase, arylsulphatase B and beta-glucuronidase. However a marked deficiency of iduronate sulphate sulphatase activity was observed, consistent with a diagnosis of Hunter's disease. Activities were reduced to less than 2% of mean control values in the patient's leucocytes, serum and cultured fibroblasts. Normal activities were measured in samples from the father and younger sister but a partial deficiency (43% of control serum) was found in the mother. Chromosome studies on the patient revealed a partial deletion of the long arm of one X-chromosome, most probably of band Xq25, which was not inherited from either parent. Studies using BrdU indicated that the deleted X chromosome was consistently late replicating, and as a result the Hunter gene was fully expressed on the other X chromosome.
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PMID:Full expression of Hunter's disease in a female with an X-chromosome deletion leading to non-random inactivation. 310 Jan 13

This report describes a third mucopolysaccharidosis in animals: canine mucopolysaccharidosis VII. The affected dog was the offspring of a father-daughter mating. Weakness in the rear legs was evident at 8 weeks of age and became progressively worse. He had a large head, a shortened maxilla, and corneal granularities. Most joints were extremely lax, easily subluxated, with joint capsules that were swollen and fluctuant. The dog was alert and had apparently normal pain perception. At 13 months of age, there was radiographic evidence of extensive skeletal disease including bilateral femoral head luxation, abnormalities in the shape and density of the carpal and tarsal bones, radiolucent lesions of the epiphyseal regions of most long bones, and cervical vertebral dysplasia and platyspondylia. The electrophoretic pattern of precipitated glycosaminoglycans indicated a predominance of chondroitin sulfate. The animal died suddenly from gastric dilatation. There was generalized hepatomegaly, thickening of the atrioventricular heart valves, and generalized polyarthropathy. Vacuolated cytoplasm was observed in hepatocytes, keratocytes, fibroblasts, chondrocytes and cells of the synovial membrane, retinal pigment epithelium, and cardiac valves. Neurons had cytoplasmic vacuoles. Electron microscopy demonstrated membrane-bound cytoplasmic inclusions in polymorphonuclear leukocytes, hepatocytes, synovium, heart valves and spleen. The activities of 12 lysosomal hydrolases were determined in liver from the affected and control dogs: beta-glucuronidase (EC 3.2.1.31), beta-hexosaminidases A and B (EC 3.2.1.30), alpha-hexosaminidase (EC 3.2.1.-), alpha-L-iduronidase (EC 3.2.1.76), alpha-galactosidase A (EC 3.2.1.22), beta-galactosidase (EC 3.2.1.23), arylsulfatases A and B (EC 3.1.6.1), acid alpha-mannosidase (EC 3.2.1.24), acid beta-mannosidase (EC 3.2.1.25), and N-acetyl-D-galactosamine-6-sulfate sulfatase (EC 3.1.6.-).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Beta-glucuronidase deficiency in a dog: a model of human mucopolysaccharidosis VII. 643 80