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Query: UMLS:C0022716 (
Menkes
)
1,057
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Both deficiency and excess of copper induce toxic effects on mammalian cell systems in vivo and in vitro. The effects can be related to the affinities of Cu(II) ions for specific cell components. The nucleus is a potential site for temporary Cu storage while primary targets for free Cu(II) ions are the thiol groups which reduce the ions to Cu(I). Cu(II) ions show a high affinity for nucleic acids, binding with DNA both at intrastrand and interstrand levels, possibly through intercalation between GC pairs. The ability to chelate Cu(II) ions is seen to be of the order: purine greater than purine ribonucleotides greater than purine ribonucleoside greater than pyrimidine ribonucleotides. Copper is an integral part of enzyme activation and enters into the molecular structure of several proteins, like
ceruloplasmin
. Cu(II) ion is a potential mutagenic agent as seen by its property of inducing infidelity in DNA synthesis in vitro. Teratogenic activities of copper have been reported but carcinogenicity is not yet confirmed. Copper is an essential component of chromatin and is known to accumulate preferentially in the heterochromatic regions. External application of higher doses, however, induces both clastogenic effects and spindle disturbances. In certain forms, inorganic copper enhances the clastogenic activity of other agents. The most widely studied human genetic maladies linked with copper metabolism are
Menkes
' and Wilson's diseases. Several mutations are known which influence Cu homeostasis in mammals. Such mutations in mice have been used extensively for biochemical studies.
...
PMID:Effects of copper on mammalian cell components. 246 42
The authors describe two new cases of
Menkes' syndrome
, both of which belong to the same family. Clinically, one of them began with a convulsive encephalopathy and the most significant features observed in the other were psychomotor delay and changes in the hair. In both cases, the quantity of copper and
ceruloplasmin
was very low. A description is given of the clinical, electroencephalographic and radiological findings and a microscopic study of the hair. One of them died at the age of 16 months and the other is at present 2 5/12 years old and demonstrates a serious psychomotor delay. Given the inefficiency of the treatment, genetic counsel and prenatal diagnosis are the only useful alternatives for the control of this phenomenon.
...
PMID:[Menkes syndrome: study of 2 new cases]. 269 65
The authors describe a patient who presented from birth on a severe involvement of connective tissues with pathological fractures, lack of auricular cartilage, hyperlaxity of fingers and cutis laxa with deep folds, all suggestive of derangements of collagen and elastin. Hypothermia at 24 hours of age should have already indicated the possibility of
Menkes' syndrome
. From the 3rd month on, the patient presents a neurological deterioration and a myoclonic epilepsy which is resistant to treatment. Craniocerebral tomodensitometry revealed, with time, a cerebral atrophy and subdural hematomas. Angiodysplasia of a coronary artery was seen at cardiac echocardiography. Undetectable levels of serum copper and
ceruloplasmin
, and an increased uptake of copper by fibroblasts in vitro confirmed the diagnosis of
Menkes' syndrome
. Electron microscopy of a skin biopsy disclosed a desmosomal anomaly in the epidermis. Desmosomes stay apart suggesting an alteration of the interdesmosomal cement.
...
PMID:[Menkes disease. Report of a case with pronounced involvement of connective tissues and changes in epidermal desmosomes]. 270 74
Kinky hair disease
, first described in 1962, is a sex-linked disorder, with its gene located on the long arm of the X chromosome close to the centromere. The condition is marked by intellectural deterioration, seizures, and poorly pigmented, friable hair. Bony changes, resembling scurvy, tortuosities of the cerebral and systemic vasculature, and diverticuli of the bladder are also seen. Biochemically, the most diagnostic alteration is a marked reduction in blood copper and
ceruloplasmin
levels. The mechanism for the low serum copper has not been defined. Even though parental copper administration will correct the biochemical abnormalities, such treatment will not arrest cerebral deterioration.
...
PMID:Kinky hair disease: twenty five years later. 283 49
Twin males aged 24 years showed dementia, dysarthria, gait disturbances and involuntary movements, with slightly low levels of serum copper and
ceruloplasmin
, and markedly low excretion of urinary copper. We propose that the unique combination of dementia, dysarthria, gait disturbances, involuntary movements and abnormalities of copper metabolism does not fit any known nosological entity and constitutes a "new" syndrome different from Wilson's and
Menkes
' diseases.
...
PMID:An unusual neurological disorder with abnormal copper metabolism. 306 63
A boy who died at 6 months of age was noted to have sparse, stubby and light hair, pili torti were observed microscopically, and his skin was dry and redundant. As a suspicion of
Menkes disease
was first raised after his death, serum copper and
ceruloplasmin
in serum were not measured. Unfortunately, no fibroblasts were available - only fixed and paraffin-embedded samples of brain, spleen and liver. The copper contents of the brain and the liver were lower than in an age-matched control. Fibroblast cultures from the mother, the maternal grandmother, and a maternal aunt of the index patient were analysed for 64Cu-uptake. All these females showed the uptake values expected for
Menkes
carriers, thus supporting the clinical suspicion of
Menkes disease
in the index patient. From the above-mentioned results it was highly likely that the index patient had suffered from
Menkes disease
. Adequate genetic counseling could thus be offered to the family, and in the next pregnancy a first trimester prenatal diagnosis was performed.
...
PMID:Postmortem Menkes diagnosis from carrier testing of female relatives. 343 89
Menkes
' kinky-hair syndrome is an X-linked recessive neurodegenerative and connective-tissue disorder, with decreased serum copper and
ceruloplasmin
-copper oxidase concentrations and tissue-specific increases in copper content. Clinical manifestations can be related to relative copper deficiency and reduced activity of cuproenzymes in multiple organs. An animal model is provided by mice hemizygous for mutant alleles, such as the blotchy allele, at the X-linked mottled locus. This locus may be homologous in mouse and man. The basic defect is unknown but has been thought to reside in the regulation of the function or synthesis of metallothioneins. In the blotchy mouse and in cultured skin fibroblasts derived therefrom, we showed that the mutation specifically affects the metabolism of copper and not other trace metals. Excessive accumulation and abnormal (reduced) exit kinetics were demonstrated for copper but not for the related trace metals cadmium and zinc. While metallothionein-I messenger RNA (mRNA) concentrations were elevated in blotchy fibroblasts, the elevations in metallothionein-I mRNA in response to metallothionein inducers (cadmium, copper) were similar in blotchy and control cells. Further, metallothionein-I mRNA levels were indistinguishable in mutant and control fibroblasts containing equivalent intracellular copper concentrations. Finally, metallothionein-I mRNA content was not elevated in blotchy kidneys at early developmental stages, before storage of excessive copper. The aggregate data suggest that the basic defect in the blotchy mouse--and, by analogy, in
Menkes' syndrome
--does not reside in defective modulation of metallothionein function and does not cause abnormal regulation of metallothionein synthesis.
...
PMID:Regulation of copper metabolism in the mottled mouse. 367 14
A boy with clinical characteristics of
Menkes disease
was described. Extremely low serum copper concentration, low
ceruloplasmin
level and increased copper accumulation in cultured fibroblasts confirmed the diagnosis. Electronmicroscopy of elastic cartilage showed abnormalities of chondrocyte function and a derangement of extracellular substance polymerization.
...
PMID:A case of Menkes disease cell culture examination and elastic cartilage electronmicroscopy. 384 43
The pathogenesis of
Menkes disease
seems to be linked to metallothionein which binds to copper trapped within cells in some tissues. The only known therapy for this disease is parenteral administration of copper, but the effects are equivocal. We treated a patient with
Menkes disease
by giving vitamin C orally. The clinical manifestation and bone changes improved and the plasma copper and
ceruloplasmin
levels gradually increased. Vitamin C may prevent the binding of copper and metallothionein by its reducing effect, and excess copper would be released from the cells. Vitamin C treatment is a simple and physiological method, and should aid in clarifying the pathogenesis of the disease.
...
PMID:Menkes disease: is vitamin C treatment effective? 408 90
In a 4-year-old male with
Menkes
kinky hair disease (MKHD) treated with copper supplement therapy, reduced cytochrome a + a3 contents in liver was demonstrated to be 0.029 against 0.128 nmol/mg protein in the control. Cytochrome c oxidase activities in brain, liver, skeletal muscle, and heart were 47, 22, 54 and 59% of the control, respectively. The copper contents in brain and liver were decreased. In spite of increased serum levels of copper and
ceruloplasmin
, the decreased cytochrome c oxidase activities in various organs were not corrected by copper supplement therapy. A search for a therapeutic method which can normalize copper enzymes in brain and liver, would seem to be a prerequisite for the treatment of MKHD.
...
PMID:Cytochrome c oxidase deficiency in Menkes kinky hair disease. 632 7
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