Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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 susceptibility is a lethal autosomal dominant disorder of skeletal muscle metabolism that is triggered by all potent inhalation anesthetic gases. Recent linkage studies suggest a genetic locus for this disorder on 19q13.1. We have previously reported three unrelated families diagnosed with MHS that are unlinked to markers surrounding this locus on 19q13.1. In this report we extend these observations and present linkage studies on 16 MHS families. Four families (25%) were found linked to the region 19q12-q13.2 (Zmax = 2.96 with the ryanodine receptor at theta = 0.0). Five families (31%) were found closely linked to the anonymous marker NME1 (previously designated NM23) on chromosome 17q11.2-q24 (Zmax = 3.26 at theta = 0.0). Two families (13%) were clearly unlinked to either of these chromosomal regions. In five additional families, data were insufficient to determine their linkage status (they were potentially linked to two or more sites). The results of our heterogeneity analyses are consistent with the hypothesis that MHS can be caused in humans by any one of at least three distinct genetic loci. Furthermore, we provide preliminary linkage data suggesting the localization of a gene in human MHS to 17q11.2-q24 (MHS2), with a gene frequency of this putative locus approximately equal to that of the MHS1 locus on 19q.
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PMID:Evidence for the localization of a malignant hyperthermia susceptibility locus (MHS2) to human chromosome 17q. 142 85

Malignant hyperthermia (MH) is a potentially lethal pharmacogenetic disease with autosomal dominant inheritance triggered by exposure to commonly used inhalational anaesthetics or depolarising muscle relaxants. A MHS locus has been identified on human chromosome 19q12-q13.2 and the gene for the skeletal muscle calcium release channel of sarcoplasmic reticulum (ryanodine receptor) (RYR1) is considered a candidate for the molecular defect. However, MH has been shown to be genetically heterogeneous, and in the ensuing search for other MHS genes, a locus on chromosome 17q has been proposed, and the gene for the adult muscle sodium channel (SCN4A) was suggested as a candidate. We performed linkage studies using polymorphic microsatellite markers for subunits of the skeletal muscle dihydropyridine (DHP) receptor, CACNL1A3 mapped to chromosome 1q, as well as C-ACNLB1 and CACNLG, the latter two localised on chromosome 17q11.2-q24 in proximity to the proposed MHS2 and the SCN4A loci, and we also included markers for the loci D17S250, D17S579, NM23 (NME1), GH1, and SCN4A from that region. Our results exclude the alpha 1, beta 1 and gamma subunit of the DHP receptor as well as the SCN4A locus from that region. Our results exclude the alpha 1, beta 1, and gamma subunit of the DHP receptor as well as the SCN4A locus as candidates for the molecular defect in MHS for these pedigrees where also the RYR1 on chromosome 19q13.1 has been excluded. A multipoint analysis excludes the disease from the entire 84 cM interval containing the proposed MHS locus on chromosome 17q.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Exclusion of malignant hyperthermia susceptibility (MHS) from a putative MHS2 locus on chromosome 17q and of the alpha 1, beta 1, and gamma subunits of the dihydropyridine receptor calcium channel as candidates for the molecular defect. 839 39