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Enzyme
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0023890 (
cirrhosis
)
42,195
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Type II citrullinemia (
CTLN2
) is characterized by a deficiency of argininosuccinate synthetase (ASS) in the liver. Mutation analysis of the SLC25A13 gene, which is responsible for
CTLN2
, provides a rapid and accurate diagnosis. We describe clinical, biochemical and histologic features of two patients, whose diagnosis was finally made by mutation analysis. They initially presented with symptoms related to hyperammonemia at 16 to 22 years of age. A patient had shown mental retardation and growth failure from early childhood. Laboratory findings including amino acids, were characteristic, such as elevated citrulline, arginine, and lysine concentrations, but definitive diagnosis had not been made. The patients died of
liver cirrhosis
and hepatoma at 31 and 34 years old, respectively. Fatty change in the hepatocytes was commonly observed in the autopsied specimens. ASS activity was decreased in the liver of both patients, and a concomitant decrease of arginase activity was found in one case. Investigation for the SLC25A13 mutation revealed that one patient was homozygous for IVS11 + 1G>A, and the other was compound heterozygote (851del4/S225X). Comparison of genetic, enzymatic and biochemical data among various cases of
CTLN2
will be essential to understand the real nature of the disease.
...
PMID:Application of mutation analysis for the previously uncertain cases of adult-onset type II citrullinemia (CTLN2) and their clinical profiles. 1251 93
Citrullinemia is a metabolic disorder characterized by elevated plasma concentrations of citrulline and ammonia. Adult-onset citrullinemia (type II,
CTLN2
) has been attributed to citrin deficiency caused by mutations in the SLC25A13 gene.
CTLN2
is associated with a high incidence of hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in Japanese. We report a 48-year-old Taiwanese man with citrullinemia, who was in good health until the age of 34 when he had repeated episodes of consciousness disturbance. Hyperammonia (201 micromol/L) was found during an episode of coma. Liver function and electrolyte levels were normal at that time. Serologic markers of viral hepatitis B and C were negative. Analysis of genomic DNA extracted from peripheral blood leukocytes showed homozygous 851del4 mutation in exon 9 of the SLC25A13 gene on chromosome 7q21.3. Fourteen years after disease onset, at the age of 48, he was admitted due to an episode of coma. Abdominal sonography and computed tomography showed a 2.5 cm tumor in the left lobe of the liver, without evidence of
liver cirrhosis
. Wedge resection of the tumor was performed and grade 2 HCC was diagnosed. The nontumor part of the resected specimen showed chronic persistent hepatitis with moderate steatosis. The results in this case support that both citrin deficiency and steatohepatitis may contribute to hepatocarcinogenesis.
...
PMID:Homozygous SLC25A13 mutation in a Taiwanese patient with adult-onset citrullinemia complicated with steatosis and hepatocellular carcinoma. 1700 Apr 60
Adult-onset citrullinemia (
CTLN2
) is a rare hereditary metabolic disorder characterized by highly increased concentration of citrulline and ammonia in the plasma, which is ascribed to a deficiency of argininosuccinate synthetase (ASS), one of the urea cycle enzymes mainly located in the liver. Neurological manifestation in
CTLN2
patients closely resemble those of hepatic encephalopathy and in the past, most patients usually followed rapidly deteriorating clinical courses and died of severe brain edema within a few years after onset. However, in 1995 the first
CTLN2
patient who was successfully treated by living-related liver transplantation was reported and since then more than 30 patients had underwent this operation in our country, showing good outcomes. No primary defect had not been found within ASS gene locus, but the causative gene of this disorder is now identified as the "citrin gene", which might act as a aspartate/glutamate transporter in mitochondria. Different phenotypes are seen in the individuals with a citrin deficiency: neonatal intrahepatic cholestasis, juvenile-onset chronic pancreatitis and hepatocellular carcinoma without
cirrhosis
can precede the appearance of
CTLN2
. The precise pathogenesis of this disease that includes the relationship between the mutations of citrin gene and a deficiency of hepatic ASS activity remains unclear.
...
PMID:[Adult-onset citrullinemia]. 1722 80
Adult-onset citrullinemia (
CTLN2
) is a rare hereditary metabolic disorder characterized by highly increased concentration of citrulline and ammonia in the plasma, which is ascribed to a deficiency of argininosuccinate synthetase (ASS), one of the urea cycle enzymes mainly located in the liver. Neurological manifestation in
CTLN2
patients closely resemble those of hepatic encephalopathy and in the past, most patients usually followed rapidly deteriorating clinical courses and died of severe brain edema within a few years after onset. However, in 1995 the first
CTLN2
patient who was successfully treated by living-related liver transplantation was reported and since then more than 30 patients had underwent this operation in our country, showing good outcomes. No primary defect had not been found within ASS gene locus, but the causative gene of this disorder is now identified as the "citrin gene", which might act as a aspartate/glutamate transporter in mitochondria. Different phenotypes are seen in the individuals with a citrin deficiency: neonatal intrahepatic cholestasis, juvenile-onset chronic pancreatitis and hepatocellular carcinoma without
cirrhosis
can precede the appearance of
CTLN2
. The precise pathogenesis of this disease that includes the relationship between the mutations of citrin gene and a deficiency of hepatic ASS activity remains unclear.
...
PMID:[Adult-onset citrullinemia]. 1735 80