Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (hypotonia)
5,860 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In this paper, we describe a baby male born to healthy non-consanguineous parents presenting at birth with hypotonia and seizures. Additional salient clinical features included the development of glaucoma, the absence of significant facial dysmorphism and the absence of liver enlargement or renal cysts. The patient died at the age of 3 months. At autopsy, liver fibrosis and kidney glomerulosclerosis were noted. Neuropathological findings included pachygyria of the olivary nuclei and cerebellar neuronal heterotopias. There was no evidence for a demyelinating process. Biochemically, the patient was found to have elevated plasma levels of very-long-chain fatty acids (VLCFA) and abnormal bile acid intermediates, whereas other indicators of peroxisomal function (plasmalogen biosynthesis and plasma pipecolic acid) were normal. Catalase staining of a liver biopsy specimen revealed peroxisomes to be present in normal numbers, although some were abnormally large. Trilamellar inclusions typical of a peroxisomal fatty acid oxidation defect were present in macrophages. Indeed, beta-oxidation of the very-long-chain fatty acid hexacosanoic acid (C26:0) was found to be strongly deficient. Fatty acyl-CoA oxidase activity in the patient's liver was normal, however. Furthermore immunocytochemical studies using antibodies against acyl-CoA oxidase, bifunctional protein and peroxisomal thiolase, revealed the normal localization of all three enzyme proteins within the peroxisomes. We suggest that our patient has a selective peroxisomal beta-oxidation defect, a recently identified heterogeneous group of early-onset peroxisomal disorders distinct from the Zellweger syndrome and other generalized peroxisomal disorders.
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PMID:Neonatal seizures and severe hypotonia in a male infant suffering from a defect in peroxisomal beta-oxidation. 148 48

The cerebrohepatorenal (Zellweger) syndrome is a fatal autosomal recessive disorder manifested in the neonatal period by profound hypotonia, psychomotor retardation, dysmorphic features, and an enlarged liver. In this study we demonstrate fivefold or greater increases of very-long-chain fatty acid levels, particularly hexacosanoic acid (C26:0) and hexacosenoic acid (C26:1), in plasma and cultured skin fibroblasts from 20 patients. Similar findings in cultured amniocytes from 3 of 14 women in whom the fetus was at risk of the Zellweger syndrome permitted prenatal diagnosis. Oxidation of very-long-chain fatty acids, which normally takes place in the peroxisome, was impaired in homogenates of cultured skin fibroblasts and amniocytes. This observation extends the evidence that the Zellweger syndrome belongs to the newly formulated category of peroxisomal disorders. The pattern of excess very-long-chain fatty acids differs from that demonstrated previously in patients with childhood adrenoleukodystrophy. The study of very-long-chain fatty acids provides a convenient method for the early diagnosis and prenatal detection of the Zellweger syndrome.
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PMID:The cerebrohepatorenal (Zellweger) syndrome. Increased levels and impaired degradation of very-long-chain fatty acids and their use in prenatal diagnosis. 670 9