Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (mental retardation)
15,878 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pregnant rats were loaded with L-phenylalanine, and the distributions of [14C]leucine and [14C]urea into fetal plasma and tissues were examined. Uptake of [14C]leucine into the supernatant and protein fractions of fetal plasma and tissues was low in the rats loaded with phenylalanine. In contrast, [14C]urea was distributed identically in both groups, indicating that maternal hyperphenylalaninemia did not affect blood flow across the placenta. Administration of phenylalanine and p-chlorophenylalanine produced amino acid imbalance in fetal tissues. Along with these changes, polysomes of the affected fetal heart and brain disaggregated without changes in the ribonuclease activity. These results indicate that high phenylalanine levels in maternal plasma disturb the active transport of amino acids across the placenta, causing an amino acid imbalance and disaggregation of polysomes in fetal heart and brain. These changes may contribute to the congenital heart disease and mental retardation of maternal phenylketonuria.
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PMID:Effects of phenylalanine loading on protein synthesis in the fetal heart and brain of rat: an experimental approach to maternal phenylketonuria. 294 18

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), a sex-linked degenerative disorder of the muscle, is one of the most common lethal genetic diseases in man. It affects about one male in 3,500, with an estimated one-third of cases being caused by new mutations. A less severe disease, Becker's muscular dystrophy (BMD), maps to the same chromosomal locus and is most probably an allelic form of DMD. Both diseases are sometimes associated with various degrees of mental retardation; the molecular basis of these phenotypes is unknown (for review, see ref. 1). The giant DMD gene spans approximately 2,000 kilobases (kb) (0.05% of the human genome) and encodes a 14-kb mRNA. The tissue-specificity of its expression has not been precisely determined. Monaco et al., using Northern blots, reported expression of the gene in human fetal skeletal muscle and small intestine but not in human fetal brain, or in human cultured myoblasts and transformed B and T cells. More recently, expression was detected in mouse skeletal and cardiac muscle, but not in mouse brain. Here we show, using a ribonuclease protection assay, that the DMD gene is developmentally regulated in rat and mouse myogenic cell cultures, and that it is expressed in rat and mouse striated muscle, in mouse smooth muscle and in rat, mouse and rabbit brain. We could not detect transcripts in other non-muscle tissues.
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PMID:Expression of the putative Duchenne muscular dystrophy gene in differentiated myogenic cell cultures and in the brain. 334 Feb 14