Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022716 (Menkes)
1,057 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

During a systematic chromosomal survey of 167 unrelated boys with the X-linked recessive Menkes disease (MIM 309400), a unique rearrangement of the X chromosome was detected, involving an insertion of the long arm segment Xq13.3-q21.2 into the short arm at band Xp11.4, giving the karyotype 46,XY,ins(X) (p11.4q13.3q21.2). The same rearranged X chromosome was present de novo in the subject's phenotypically normal mother, where it was preferentially inactivated. The restriction fragment length polymorphism and methylation patterns at DXS255 indicated that the rearrangement originated from the maternal grandfather. Together with a previously described X;autosomal translocation in a female Menkes patient, the present finding supports the localization of the Menkes locus (MNK) to Xq13, with a suggested fine mapping to sub-band Xq13.3. This localization is compatible with linkage data in both man and mouse. The chromosomal bend associated with the X-inactivation center (XIC) was present on the proximal long arm of the rearranged X chromosome, in line with a location of XIC proximal to MNK. Combined data suggest the following order: Xcen-XIST(XIC), DXS128-DXS171, DXS56-MNK-PGK1-Xqter.
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PMID:Mapping of the Menkes locus to Xq13.3 distal to the X-inactivation center by an intrachromosomal insertion of the segment Xq13.3-q21.2. 134 49

The author presents and discusses the anaesthetic implications of a four-month-old infant with Menkes' syndrome who required tracheostomy. Menkes' syndrome is an X-linked recessive disorder of copper absorption and metabolism. Defective processing of copper results in abnormalities of several enzyme systems leading to severe dysfunction of multiple organ systems. Due to the progressive nature of this disorder and its severe effects on several different organ systems, most importantly the central nervous system, these children frequently require anaesthetic care during imaging procedures such as MRI or during various surgical operations. The high prevalence of seizure disorders, gastroesophageal reflux with the risk of aspiration, and airway complications related to poor pharyngeal muscle control are of concern to the anaesthetist. In addition, defective collagen formation, similar to that seen in Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, may be present. Identification of these associated conditions during the preoperative examination will guide the selection of appropriate, safe anaesthetic care for these children.
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PMID:Anaesthetic considerations in the child with Menkes' syndrome. 139 61

The gene responsible for Menkes syndrome has been assigned to Xq13 by a combination of comparative mapping and linkage analysis. A previous report has mapped the translocation breakpoint associated with the disease in a female patient to an interval delimited by PGK1 and a group of six more proximal Xq13 markers, including DXS56. We have characterized a number of PGK1- or DXS56-positive YACs, from which we have generated six new markers. One of them identifies a small overlap region between a PGK1-positive YAC and three DXS56-positive YACs, distal to the Menkes breakpoint. A 560-kb region covered by a DXS56-positive YAC has been restriction-mapped and subcloned, disclosing a 187-kb MluI fragment astride the breakpoint. A probe mapping distal to the rearrangement in the same interval reveals altered PGFE fragments in a hybrid constructed from the translocation patient's DNA. We describe the development of a cosmid contig extending 150 kb from a nearby CpG island across the breakpoint. This contig includes four adjacent clones displaying cross-specific hybridization.
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PMID:Fine mapping and cloning of the breakpoint associated with Menkes syndrome in a female patient. 142 84

The proximal long arm of the human X chromosome (Xcen----Xq13) encompasses an estimated 23 megabases of DNA and contains numerous identified genetic loci. In order to generate a highly enriched source of DNA from this region, radiation-reduced human-hamster hybrids were constructed and screened to identify those that contained at least part of proximal Xq. Eight such hybrids were identified and characterized by Southern blot and fluorescence in situ hybridization analyses to determine more precisely the human DNA complement in each. One hybrid contains the entire proximal long arm and will be useful for mapping Xcen----Xq13 in its entirety and for localizing genes within this region. Another hybrid contains a smaller portion of the proximal long arm that includes the region reported to contain the gene for Menkes' disease.
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PMID:Isolation and characterization of radiation-reduced hybrids containing portions of the proximal long arm of the human X chromosome: identification of hybrids containing the Menkes' disease locus. 149 17

We herein describe a case of Menkes' Syndrome in a Jamaican infant. The diagnosis was confirmed by low serum copper and ceruloplasmin levels.
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PMID:Menkes' kinky hair syndrome. 156 95

Linkage analyses were performed in 11 families with X-linked Menkes disease. In each family more than one affected patient had been diagnosed. Forty informative meioses were tested using 11 polymorphic DNA markers. From two-point linkage analyses high lod scores are seen for DXS146 (pTAK-8; maximal lod score 3.16 at recombination fraction [theta] = .0), for DXS1 (p-8; maximal lod score 3.44 at theta = .0), for PGK1 (maximal lod score 2.48 at theta = .0), and for DXS3 (p19-2; maximal lod score 2.90 at theta = .0). This indicates linkage to the pericentromeric region. Multilocus linkage analyses of the same data revealed a peak for the location score between DXS146(pTAK-8) and DXYS1X(pDP34). The most likely location is between DXS159 (cpX289) and DXYS1X(pDP34). Odds for this location relative to the second-best-supported region, between DXS146(pTAK-8) and DXS159 (cpX289), are better than 74:1. Visualization of individual recombinant X chromosomes in two of the Menkes families showed the Menkes locus to be situated between DXS159(cpX289) and DXS94(pXG-12). Combination of the present results with the reported absence of Menkes symptoms in male patients with deletions in Xq21 leads to the conclusion that the Menkes locus is proximal to DXSY1X(pDP34) and located in the region Xq12 to Xq13.3.
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PMID:Multipoint linkage analysis in Menkes disease. 157 Aug 30

The EEG pattern of continuous, generalized, high-voltage fast rhythms without any reaction to eye-opening/closure, photic stimulation, or the sleep-awaking cycle was previously reported to be characteristic of infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy (INAD). However, we have observed such fast activity in one child with INAD and one with Menkes' kinky-hair syndrome. They both exhibited severe psychomotor disturbance, and their EEGs also included "frontal intermittent rhythmic delta activity (FIRDA)," a nonspecific EEG finding suggestive of organic encephalopathy. Since the continuous, generalized, high-voltage fast activity had features suggestive of spindles in both children, this EEG pattern is thought to actually represent "extreme spindles," and nonspecifically to indicate widespread organic brain damage.
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PMID:Continuous, generalized, high-voltage fast activity and FIRDA in two children. 158 51

The effects of a low copper diet on pigmentation, pigment cell and melanosome morphology have been investigated in ACI/T male rats. After a three months treatment the fur and skin pigmentation is reduced as compared to the controls. The melanocytes of the treated rats show the phenotype of active pigment cells while some melanosomes are abnormally differentiated: both lamellar and granular organelles are present in the same pigment cell and mosaic age melanosomes appear. The abnormal melanosome structure expressed by the treated-rat melanocytes is also evident in vitro. After incubation with deoxycholate the melanosomes from the low-copper diet treated rats are much more altered than those from the control rats. The phenotype of the rats starved for copper seems to mimic as regards pigmentation the phenotype of the mouse Mo (mottled) mutation that is an experimental model of the Menkes' kinky hair syndrome. In conclusion copper deficiency seems to affect both the morphology and function of the pigment cells.
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PMID:Copper deficiency and pigmentation in the rat: morphofunctional aspects. 160 May 17

The aim of this article is to emphasize the important role that copper plays in the function of nerve cells. We are reporting preliminary data which suggest that the swelling of axons which we produce in rats by iminodipropionitrile, IDPN, is due to its chelating action on copper, and how conversely supplementation with copper abolishes both symptoms and lesions. The copper values we obtained by atomic absorption spectrophotometry of the spinal cord and brain from the animals fully support this contention. In comparing these results with the diseases that are known to be due to copper deficiency, namely Menkes disease in man, swayback in lambs and several neurological mutant mice, we find not only similar axonal swellings, but also amelioration of symptoms and lesions by early administration of copper. Considering the main forms in which copper is present, we discuss the cuproproteins, i.e. ceruloplasmin and metallothionein, and their role in transport and delivery of copper to various organs. Further, the many cuproenzymes i.e. superoxide dismutase, tryptophan-2,3-dioxygenase, lysine oxidase, cytochrome oxidase, monoamine oxidases, tyrosinase, dopamine-beta-hydroxylase and d-amino levulinate dehydratase are noted for their roles in the nervous system. Finally, we suggest that neuronal copper deficiency should be more fully investigated as a possible etiological factor in the more common neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, ALS.
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PMID:Deficiency of copper can cause neuronal degeneration. 161 61

We report a male infant with Menkes' disease who showed, at the age of 3 months, slow growth, hair abnormalities such as pili torti and white hair, and low levels of serum copper and ceruloplasmin. The exceptionally bright portions of his hair contained eumelanin and pheomelanin at levels only half those of normal Japanese controls. After subcutaneous administration of copper-histidinate for 2 months, his scalp hair changed to dark brown.
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PMID:Menkes' disease: report of a case and determination of eumelanin and pheomelanin in hypopigmented hair. 163 75


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