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Query: UMLS:C0024591 (
malignant hyperthermia
)
2,353
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Malignant hyperthermia
(MH) is a life threatening complication following anaesthesia with potent inhalational agents and suxamethonium. The signs of MH are caused by increased metabolism and secondary stimulation of the sympathetic nervous system due to uncontrolled, high intracellular concentrations of calcium in skeletal muscle. The hyperthermia is secondary to the increased energy turnover. Calcium release from the sarcoplasmic reticulum is increased due to a low threshold for release and prolonged opening of the calcium channel upon normal stimulation. The gene encoding the calcium channel is localized on chromosome 19 in humans, and a substitution of cysteine for
arginine
has recently been described in one family with MH.
...
PMID:[Malignant hyperthermia]. 131 Mar 56
Twenty-one polymorphic sequence variants of the RYR1 gene, including 13 restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs), were identified by sequence analysis of human ryanodine receptor (RYR1) cDNAs from three individuals predisposed to
malignant hyperthermia
(MH). All RFLPs were detectable in PCR-amplified products, and their segregation was consistent with our initial finding of linkage to MH in the nine families previously informative for one or more intragenic markers (MacLennan et al., 1990, Nature 343:559-561). Four amino acid substitutions were identified in the study:
Arg
for Gly248, Cys for Arg470, Leu for Pro1785, and Cys for Gly2059. Of 45 families tested, a single family presented the
Arg
for Gly248 substitution where it segregated with
malignant hyperthermia
, making it a candidate mutation for predisposition to MH in man. The other three polymorphic substitutions failed to segregate with
malignant hyperthermia
in those families in which they occurred, implying that they represent polymorphisms with little or no effect on the function of the RYR1 gene.
...
PMID:Polymorphisms and deduced amino acid substitutions in the coding sequence of the ryanodine receptor (RYR1) gene in individuals with malignant hyperthermia. 135 42
A point mutation in the human gene for the skeletal muscle calcium release channel (ryanodine receptor [RYR1]) correlates with inheritance of
malignant hyperthermia
in a family of Northern European descent. The substitution of thymine for cytosine at position 1840 of the RYR1 transcript results in a cysteine-for-
arginine
substitution at position 614 (R614C) of the amino acid sequence. The mutation was absent in 59 normal individuals from the general population, in 61 additional unrelated
malignant hyperthermia
-susceptible patients, and in 18 patients with
malignant hyperthermia
associated with other inherited or congenital diseases. Together with reports of an equivalent mutation in six susceptible pig strains and an identical mutation in one other human pedigree, these findings suggest that the cysteine-for-
arginine
mutation represents a shared calcium release channel pathogenesis between porcine
malignant hyperthermia
and a subset of mutations responsible for the human
malignant hyperthermia
syndrome.
...
PMID:A cysteine-for-arginine substitution (R614C) in the human skeletal muscle calcium release channel cosegregates with malignant hyperthermia. 151 Feb 67
The substitutions of T for C1843 in the porcine ryanodine receptor (RYR1) gene, which deletes a HinPI restriction endonuclease site and creates a HgiAI site, and of T for C1840 in human RYR1, which deletes a RsaI site, lead to Cys for
Arg
substitutions in the ryanodine receptors and are probable causal mutations for
malignant hyperthermia
(MH). To improve the restriction endonuclease assay of these sites, thereby providing an accurate, reliable diagnosis for MH, introns flanking the exon containing the mutation were sequenced, permitting identification and PCR amplification of a 659-bp porcine gene sequence that contains both constant and variant HgiAI sites and a 922-bp human gene sequence that contains both constant and variant RsaI sites. As a result, these PCR-amplified sequences contain constant internal controls for the reliable differentiation by restriction endonuclease digestion of normal, heterozygous, and MH genotypes.
...
PMID:Refinement of diagnostic assays for a probable causal mutation for porcine and human malignant hyperthermia. 163 9
Malignant hyperthermia
(MH) is a devastating, potentially lethal response to anesthetics that occurs in genetically predisposed individuals. The skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor (RYR1) gene has been linked to porcine and human MH. Furthermore, a Cys for
Arg
substitution tightly linked to, and potentially causative of, porcine MH has been identified in the ryanodine receptor. Analysis of 35 human families predisposed to
malignant hyperthermia
has revealed the presence, and cosegregation with phenotype, of the corresponding substitution in a single family. This substitution, by analogy to the findings in pig, may be causal for predisposition to MH in this family.
...
PMID:A substitution of cysteine for arginine 614 in the ryanodine receptor is potentially causative of human malignant hyperthermia. 177 74
Differences genetically associated with the development of hypertension in a strain of genetically hypertensive rat (
MHS
) were described in ion transport across erythrocyte membranes compared to normotensive control (MNS). Antibodies against the MNS ghost proteins were raised in the
MHS
, producing an immunoreaction against a 105 KDa protein later identified as adducin. A clone coding for a portion of mouse adducin was isolated with these antibodies. Using this clone, overlapping cDNA clones coding for a 63 KDa adducin-like protein were isolated. A family of related mRNAs of about 3500, 3800, 4200 nt, was found to be present in spleen, kidney and heart tissues. Similar mRNAs and an additional tissue specific 8000 nt mRNA are present in brain. All mRNAs seem to be generated by alternative splicing from the transcript of a single gene. An interesting polymorphism, a Gln to
Arg
substitution, was detected in the carboxiterminal area of rat adducin 63.
...
PMID:Molecular cloning of an adducin-like protein: evidence of a polymorphism in the normotensive and hypertensive rats of the Milan strain. 205 21
Malignant hyperthermia
(MH) is a potentially fatal autosomal dominant disorder of skeletal muscle and is triggered in susceptible people by all commonly used inhalational anaesthetics and depolarizing muscle relaxants. To date, six mutations in the skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor gene (RYR1) have been identified in
malignant hyperthermia
susceptible (MHS) and central core disease (CCD) cases. Using SSCP analysis, we have screened the RYR1 gene in affected individuals for novel MHS mutations and have identified a G to A transition mutation which results in the replacement of a conserved Gly at position 2433 with an
Arg
. The Gly2433Arg mutation was present in four of 104 unrelated MHS individuals investigated and was not detected in a normal population sample. This mutation is adjacent to the previously identified Arg2434His mutation reported in a CCD/MH family and indicates that there may be a second region in the RYR1 gene where MHS/CCD mutations cluster.
...
PMID:Detection of a novel RYR1 mutation in four malignant hyperthermia pedigrees. 784 12
Single strand conformational polymorphism analysis was used to screen exons 43 and 44 in the skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor gene from 17 positively diagnosed members of families in which chromosome 19-linked
malignant hyperthermia
(MH) was segregating. A polymorphism in two unrelated individuals was found to result from the substitution of A for G7297, leading to the substitution of
Arg
for Gly2433. This mutation is adjacent to a mutation (Arg2434 to His) previously linked to MH and central core disease (Y. Zhang et al., Nature Genet. 1993, 5, 46-50). Subsequent screening showed the presence of the mutation in four of 106 MH families tested and its absence from about 1000 other chromosomes. The mutation was present in all six individuals in four families who had had an MH reaction, in two obligate carriers and in 10 individuals diagnosed as MH susceptible by the caffeine/halothane contracture test (CHCT). The mutation was present in an individual with a normal response to the CHCT and was absent in three individuals with a positive CHCT response. These discrepancies would be consistent with inaccuracies in the CHCT and/or with segregation of a second MH allele within two of the four affected families.
...
PMID:The substitution of Arg for Gly2433 in the human skeletal muscle ryanodine receptor is associated with malignant hyperthermia. 788 17
Malignant hyperthermia
(MH), an inherited neuromuscular disease triggered by halogenated inhalational anaesthetics and skeletal-muscle relaxants, appears to be due to an alteration of intracellular Ca2+ homoeostasis. MH occurs in 1 out of 20,000 anaesthetized adults and is characterized by hypermetabolism, skeletal-muscle rigidity and elevation in body temperature, which is frequently fatal [MacLennan and Phillips (1992) Science 256, 789-794]. The defect responsible for the disease may lie within the mechanism controlling the release of Ca2+ from sarcoplasmic reticulum via the ryanodine-receptor (RYR) Ca2+ channel; in fact a point mutation in the RYR has been associated with MH in some human families, as well as in the MH-susceptible pig. To date, however, no direct evidence has been obtained demonstrating that the point mutation is both necessary and sufficient to cause functional alterations in RYR-mediated Ca2+ release. In the present report we show that the presence of the
Arg
-to-Cys point mutation in the recombinant RYR expressed in COS-7 transfected cells causes abnormal cytosolic Ca2+ transients in response to 4-chloro-m-cresol, an agent capable of eliciting in vitro contracture of MH-susceptible muscles.
...
PMID:Alteration of intracellular Ca2+ transients in COS-7 cells transfected with the cDNA encoding skeletal-muscle ryanodine receptor carrying a mutation associated with malignant hyperthermia. 805 91
Laboratory confirmation of a clinical suspicion of
malignant hyperthermia
(MH) susceptibility by the standard in vitro contracture test remains inconclusive in patients reacting only to caffeine or halothane (called 'Equivocal') or in patients with concomitant neuromuscular disease. The detection of point mutations in the ryanodine receptor gene potentially provides additional information in these cases. The diagnostic value of the Gly341
Arg
mutation in a patient reacting in vitro only to caffeine was reported previously by Quane et al. (1994). The present report describes a patient with motor neuron disease carrying the Gly341
Arg
mutation, expanding the diagnostic value of this mutation to the group of patients with neuromuscular diseases.
...
PMID:Malignant hyperthermia susceptibility in a patient with concomitant motor neuron disease. 890 17
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