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)

1. The pathogenesis of the mental retardation in phenylketonuria remains obscure. Leucocytes have proved of value in the study of other inborn errors of metabolism. The lymphocyte is a suitable model cell for the study of mammalian metabolism, because of its ability to divide in vitro in response to various stimuli. 2. We have examined the effects of phenylalanine, phenylpyruvate, phenyl-lactate and phenylacetate on the human leucocyte and the resting and phytohaemagglutinin-stimulated rabbit lymphocyte. 3. Phenylpyruvate and phenyl-lactate reduced acetate incorporation into leucocyte lipid by 38% and 48% respectively. Only phenyl-lactate reduced acetate incorporation into the resting and stimulated lymphocyte, by 20% and 34% respectively. 4. Glucose incorporation into leucocyte lipid was unaffected by phenylalanine, phenylpyruvate and phenyl-lactate. Only phenyl-lactate inhibited (46%) the production of CO2 from glucose. 5. Phenylalanine and leucine incorporation into trichloroacetic acid-insoluble material of resting and stimulated lymphocytes was inhibited by phenyl-lactate (10-42%), phenylpyruvate (27-57%) and phenylacetate (19-39%). 6. Uridine incorporation into resting and stimulated cells was inhibited by phenyl-lactate (22-26%), phenylpyruvate (42-52%) and phenylacetate (20%). 7. Thymidine incorporation into resting lymphocytes was reduced by phenyl-lactate, phenylpyruvate, phenylacetate and phenylalanine by 12-26%. Incorporation into the stimulated cell was inhibited by phenylpyruvate and phenyl-lactate (90%) and phenylacetate (66%). 8. Phenylalanine inhibited lymphocyte pyruvate kinase and phenylpyruvate inhibited citrate synthetase. 9. These results are compared with published data relating to experimental hyperphenylalaninaemia and the effects of these metabolites on nervous tissue in vitro.
Clin Sci Mol Med 1975 Oct
PMID:Effect of phenylalanine and its metabolites on the metabolism of leucocytes and lymphocytes. 123 28

A new fragile site (FRAXE) in Xq28 is described. It appears to be a typical folate sensitive fragile site. The fragile site is not associated with mental retardation, it does not give abnormal results when subjected to Southern analysis with probe pfxa3 which detects the unstable DNA sequence characteristic of fragile X syndrome. In situ hybridization mapping locates the fragile site between 150 kb and 600 kb distal to FRAXA. The distinction between the two fragile sites is important clinically since cytogenetic detection of FRAXE, without molecular analysis, could result in misdiagnosis of fragile X syndrome.
Hum Mol Genet 1992 May
PMID:Characterisation of a new rare fragile site easily confused with the fragile X. 130 Nov 46

Norrie disease is a human X-linked recessive disorder of unknown etiology characterized by congenital blindness, sensory neural deafness and mental retardation. This disease gene was previously linked to the DXS7 (L1.28) locus and the MAO genes in band Xp11.3. We report here fine physical mapping of the obligate region containing the Norrie disease gene (NDP) defined by a recombination and by the smallest submicroscopic chromosomal deletion associated with Norrie disease identified to date. Analysis, using in addition two overlapping YAC clones from this region, allowed orientation of the MAOA and MAOB genes in a 5'-3'-3'-5' configuration. A recombination event between a (GT)n polymorphism in intron 2 of the MAOB gene and the NDP locus, in a family previously reported to have a recombination between DXS7 and NDP, delineates a flanking marker telomeric to this disease gene. An anonymous DNA probe, dc12, present in one of the YACs and in a patient with a submicroscopic deletion which includes MAOA and MAOB but not L1.28, serves as a flanking marker centromeric to the disease gene. An Alu-PCR fragment from the right arm of the MAO YAC (YMAO.AluR) is not deleted in this patient and also delineates the centromeric extent of the obligate disease region. The apparent order of these loci is telomere ... DXS7-MAOA-MAOB-NDP-dc12-YMAO.AluR ... centromere. Together these data define the obligate region containing the NDP gene to a chromosomal segment less than 150 kb.
Hum Mol Genet 1992 May
PMID:The Norrie disease gene maps to a 150 kb region on chromosome Xp11.3. 130 Nov 61

The fragile-X syndrome of mental retardation is associated with an expansion in the number of CGG repeats present in the FMR1 gene. The repeat region is within sequences characteristic of a CpG island. Methylation of CpG dinucleotides that are 5' to the CGG repeat has been shown to occur on the inactive X chromosome of normal females and on the X chromosome of affected fragile-X males, and is correlated with silencing of the FMR1 gene. The methylation status of CpG sites 3' to the repeat and within the repeat itself has not previously been reported. We have used two methylation-sensitive restriction enzymes, AciI and Fnu4HI, to further characterize the methylation pattern of the FMR1 CpG island in normal individuals and in those carrying fragile-X mutations. Our results indicate that: (i) CpG dinucleotides on the 3' side of the CGG repeat are part of the CpG island that is methylated during inactivation of a normal X chromosome in females; (ii) the CGG repeats are also part of the CpG island and are extensively methylated as a result of normal X-chromosome inactivation; (iii) similar to normal males, unaffected fragile-X males with small CGG expansions are unmethylated in the CpG island; for affected males, the patterns of methylation are similar to those of a normal, inactive X chromosome; (iv) in contrast to the partial methylation observed for certain sites in lymphocyte DNA, complete methylation was observed in DNA from cell lines containing either a normal inactive X chromosome or a fragile-X chromosome from an affected male.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Hum Mol Genet 1992 Nov
PMID:Methylation analysis of CGG sites in the CpG island of the human FMR1 gene. 130 Nov 65

Fragile X syndrome is the most frequent form of inherited mental retardation and segregates as an X-linked dominant with reduced penetrance. Recently, we have identified the FMR-1 gene at the fragile X locus. Two molecular differences of the FMR-1 gene have been found in fragile X patients: a size increase of an FMR-1 exon containing a CGG repeat and abnormal methylation of a CpG island 250 bp proximal to this repeat. Penetrant fragile X males who exhibit these changes typically show repression of FMR-1 transcription and the presumptive absence of FMR-1 protein is believed to contribute to the fragile X phenotype. It is unclear, however, if either or both molecular differences in FMR-1 gene is responsible for transcriptional silencing. We report here the prenatal diagnosis of a male fetus with fragile X syndrome by utilizing these molecular differences and show that while the expanded CGG-repeat mutation is observed in both the chorionic villi and fetus, the methylation of the CpG island is limited to the fetal DNA (as assessed by BssHII digestion). We further demonstrate that FMR-1 gene expression is repressed in the fetal tissue, as is characteristic of penetrant males, while the undermethylated chorionic villi expressed FMR-1. Since the genetic background of the tissues studied is identical, including the fragile X chromosome, these data indicate that the abnormal methylation of the FMR-1 CpG-island is responsible for the absence of FMR-1 transcription and suggests that the methylation may be acquired early in embryogenesis.
Hum Mol Genet 1992 Sep
PMID:DNA methylation represses FMR-1 transcription in fragile X syndrome. 130 13

Cognitive impairment occurs in one-third of patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy, a lethal X-linked, recessive disease caused by mutations in the dystrophin gene which is expressed in both brain and muscle, the two transcripts having alternative first exons. Previous reports have indicated that the 'brain-type' dystrophin transcript predominates in brain. Using in situ hybridisation with antisense oligonucleotides, expression of four distinct mRNAs in specific brain areas is demonstrated here; the 14 kb muscle-type and brain-type transcripts were found to coexist in cortical and hippocampal neurons and two new transcripts have been identified in dentate gyrus and cerebellar Purkinje neurons, respectively. The latter has a novel first exon which was isolated and sequenced from mouse and human, and which would encode a protein with a different amino-terminus from the known muscle- and brain-type isoforms. Mapping in human located this exon in a large intron between the muscle-type promoter and second exon of the dystrophin gene. This finding of four alternative transcripts regulated by different promoters in brain reveals a new complexity to dystrophin expression that may have important insights for mental retardation mechanisms.
Hum Mol Genet 1992 Oct
PMID:Expression of four alternative dystrophin transcripts in brain regions regulated by different promoters. 130 51

Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) and Angelman syndrome (AS) are distinct mental retardation disorders associated with deletions of proximal 15q (q11-q13) of different parental origin. Yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) clones were isolated for 9 previously mapped DNA probes from this region, and for one newly derived marker, LS6-1 (D15S113). A YAC contig of 1-1.5 Mb encompassing four markers (ML34, IR4-3R, PW71, and TD189-1) was constructed. Multi-color fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) analysis of interphase nuclei was combined with YAC contig information to provide the following order of markers: cen-IR39-ML34-IR4-3R-PW71-TD189-1-LS6++ +-1-TD3-21-GABRB3-IR10-1-CMW1-tel. FISH analysis was performed on 8 cases of PWS and 3 cases of AS, including 5 patients with normal karyotypes. All eleven patients were deleted for YACs in the interval from IR4-3R to GABRB3. On the proximal side of the deletion interval, 10/10 breakpoints fell within a single ML34 YAC of 370 kb. On the distal side, 8/9 breakpoints fell within a single IR10-1 YAC of 200 kb. These results indicate a striking consistency in the location of the proximal and distal breakpoints in PWS and AS patients. FISH analysis on a previously reported case of familial AS confirmed a submicroscopic deletion including YACs corresponding to LS6-1, TD3-21 and GABRB3 and supports the separation of the PWS and AS critical regions. Since these three YACs do not overlap each other, the minimum size of the AS critical region is > or = 650 kb.
Hum Mol Genet 1992 Sep
PMID:Molecular dissection of the Prader-Willi/Angelman syndrome region (15q11-13) by YAC cloning and FISH analysis. 136 1

To protect against reactive oxygen species, prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells have developed an antioxidant defence mechanism where O2- is converted to H2O2 by superoxide dismutase (Sod), and in a second step, H2O2 is converted to H2O by catalase (Cat) and/or glutathione peroxidase (Gpx). If Sod levels are increased without a concomitant Gpx increase, then the intermediate H2O2 accumulates. This intermediate could undergo the Fenton's reaction, generating hydroxyl radicals which may lead to lipid peroxidation in cells. In this study, we investigate the expression of Sod1, Gpx1 and susceptibility to lipid peroxidation during the aging process in mouse brains. We demonstrate that the mRNA levels and enzyme activity of Sod1 are higher in brains from adult mice compared to neonatal mice. Furthermore, we show that a linear increase in Sod1 mRNA and enzyme activity occurs with aging (1-100 weeks). On the contrary, we find that the mRNA and enzyme activity for Gpx1 does not increase with aging in mouse brains. In addition, our results demonstrate that the susceptibility of murine brains to lipid peroxidation increases with aging. The data in this study are consistent with the notion that reactive oxygen species may contribute to the aging process in mammalian brains. These results are discussed in relation to the normal aging process in mammals, and to the premature aging and mental retardation in Down syndrome.
Brain Res Mol Brain Res 1992 Apr
PMID:Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase mRNA and enzyme activity, and susceptibility to lipid peroxidation, increases with aging in murine brains. 159 44

Many human genetic diseases, including some cancers, are characterized by consistent chromosome abnormalities, such as deletions and translocations. Analyses of these mutations often prove crucial to the eventual cloning and characterization of the gene(s) responsible for the disease. Two methods for analyzing these chromosome abnormalities have been developed in recent years: somatic cell hybridization and pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE). Somatic cell hybridization is a technique for segregating an aberrant chromosome from its normal homologue in a cell derived from an unrelated species, which is usually a rodent. Panels of such hybrids dividing a given chromosomal region into increasingly smaller units can be constructed and used specifically to map DNA probes into those units. PFGE can then be used to define precise physical distances between such an array of chromosome abnormalities. Demonstrations of these analytic techniques are presented, using as an example chromosomal abnormalities involving human chromosome band 11p13, the locus for the Wilms' tumor, aniridia, genitourinary abnormality, and mental retardation (WAGR) syndrome.
Environ Mol Mutagen 1991
PMID:Molecular analysis of chromosomal rearrangements using pulsed field gel electrophoresis and somatic cell hybrids. 166 Aug 7

Human genital skin fibroblasts (GSF) make a relatively abundant 56/58 kDa protein that binds androgens. The protein shares many properties with the approximately 100 kDa androgen receptor that is encoded by a locus in the q12 region of the X chromosome. It does not appear to be androgen-induced, yet is absent in GSF of most patients with complete androgen insensitivity (CAI). A precursor-product relation with the androgen receptor (AR) protein has been largely excluded; that it may be an unorthodox product of the AR gene has not. The 56/58 kDa protein is made by the GSF of a mentally retarded subject who has CAI because of a complete deletion of the coding portion of the AR gene. Hence, the strong constitutional and statistical correlations that have been demonstrated between the two proteins cannot arise because they share the same gene. The subject's genomic DNA hybridizes normally with 11 single-copy probes from Xq11-Xq13. Therefore, we cannot attribute her mental retardation to a contiguous gene syndrome.
Mol Cell Endocrinol 1991 Jan
PMID:The 56/58 kDa androgen-binding protein in male genital skin fibroblasts with a deleted androgen receptor gene. 205 Feb 65


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