Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020538 (hypertension)
170,190 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Recent discoveries in molecular biology have much clarified the regulation and function of steroid-converting enzymes. Most progress has been made in the area of cytochromes, which regulate the side chain cleavage of cholesterol (P-450 SCC) and the 17 alpha-hydroxylase and 17,20-desmolase (or 17,20-lyase) activities (P-450 17 alpha), as well as in 3 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase. Nevertheless, there are some discrepancies between fundamental knowledge and clinical experience, which are difficult to understand: why is it for example possible that cases with 'pure' 17 alpha-hydroxylase or 17,20-desmolase deficiency exist, when there is only one cytochrome regulating both steps? After a brief review of clinical and biochemical findings in the various defects of testosterone biosynthesis, a case is discussed, which is of interest in this respect. This XY patient with female external genitalia, who has been shown to have compound heterozygous mutations, had 'pure' 17,20-desmolase deficiency up to adolescence, but additional 17 alpha-hydroxylase deficiency with hypertension developed thereafter. From this observation, it has to be concluded that as yet unknown, possibly age-dependent modulating factors exist, which influence the activity of the cytochrome. Also the estrogen replacement given to the patient might have played a role in this change.
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PMID:Recent aspects of steroid biosynthesis in male sex differentiation. Clinical studies. 130 38

We studied in vivo and in vitro steroidogenesis in six phenotypic female children with 17-hydroxylase deficiency. The diagnosis was suspected as a likely cause of familial low renin hypertension and was confirmed by findings of reduced basal and ACTH-stimulated serum and urinary levels of cortisol and other 17-hydroxysteroids, together with hypergonadotropic hypogonadism in both 46,XY and 46,XX patients, and abnormally increased secretion of 17-desoxysteroids, such as progesterone, 11-deoxycorticosterone, and corticosterone. ACTH stimulation testing demonstrated a lesser degree of 17-hydroxylase deficiency in the obligate heterozygous parents; one father had increased basal serum 17-hydroxyprogesterone values, unresponsive to ACTH, suggesting partial Leydig cell 17,20-desmolase deficiency. In vitro kinetic analysis of testicular microsomal enzymes in the affected 46,XY male pseudohermaphrodites confirmed that both 17-hydroxylase and 17,20-desmolase activities were less than 2% of those in age-matched normal subjects. However, in spite of this virtual absence of both enzymatic activities of cytochrome P450c17, Northern blot analysis demonstrated abundant amounts of RNA in these tests that hybridized to a cDNA specific for this P450 enzyme. Moreover, immunoblot analysis of sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis-resolved testicular microsomes showed an apparently normal content of an immunoreactive protein with a mol wt similar to that of authentic P450c17. These results suggest that these patients have a point mutation in the gene for P450c17; the mutant gene is transcribed, but gives rise to a protein defective in normal 17-hydroxylase and 17,20-desmolase activities.
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PMID:Combined 17-hydroxylase and 17,20-desmolase deficiencies: evidence for synthesis of a defective cytochrome P450c17. 249 25