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)

X-linked infantile spinal muscular atrophy (XL-SMA) is an X-linked disorder presenting with the clinical features hypotonia, areflexia, and multiple congenital contractures (arthrogryposis) associated with loss of anterior horn cells and infantile death. To identify the XL-SMA disease gene, we performed large-scale mutation analysis in genes located between markers DXS8080 and DXS7132 (Xp11.3-Xq11.1). This resulted in detection of three rare novel variants in exon 15 of UBE1 that segregate with disease: two missense mutations (c.1617 G-->T, p.Met539Ile; c.1639 A-->G, p.Ser547Gly) present each in one XL-SMA family, and one synonymous C-->T substitution (c.1731 C-->T, p.Asn577Asn) identified in another three unrelated families. Absence of the missense mutations was demonstrated for 3550 and absence of the synonymous mutation was shown in 7914 control X chromosomes; therefore, these results yielded statistical significant evidence for the association of the synonymous substitution and the two missense mutations with XL-SMA (p = 2.416 x 10(-10), p = 0.001815). We also demonstrated that the synonymous C-->T substitution leads to significant reduction of UBE1 expression and alters the methylation pattern of exon 15, implying a plausible role of this DNA element in developmental UBE1 expression in humans. Our observations indicate first that XL-SMA is part of a growing list of neurodegenerative disorders associated with defects in the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway and second that synonymous C-->T transitions might have the potential to affect gene expression.
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PMID:Rare missense and synonymous variants in UBE1 are associated with X-linked infantile spinal muscular atrophy. 1817 98

Infantile-onset X-linked spinal muscular atrophy (SMAX2) is a rare lethal disorder linked to mutations in the UBA1 (previously UBE1) gene, encoding ubiquitin-activating enzyme 1 that has an important role in the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. Published pathological reports are scarce. Here we report a male infant who presented from birth with predominantly truncal hypotonia following an antenatal history of reduced fetal movements. He had a myopathic face, profound weakness, multiple contractures and areflexia. Creatine kinase was moderately raised. Brain MRI showed non-specific symmetrical periventricular white matter changes. Neurophysiology revealed evidence of motor and sensory involvement and muscle biopsy showed marked inflammatory changes with subtle features suggestive of acute denervation. UBA1 sequencing revealed a novel hemizygous missense mutation (c.1670A>T; p.Glu557Val). He died from progressive respiratory failure at 4 months. On post mortem assessment, in addition to severe ventral motor neuron pathology, there was widespread involvement of the sensory system, as well as developmental and degenerative cerebellar abnormalities. In contrast to typical SMN1-associated SMA, the thalamus was unaffected. These findings indicate that SMAX2 is more accurately classified as a motor sensory neuronopathy rather than a pure anterior horn cell disorder. Ubiquitin-proteasome pathway defects may not only cause neurodegeneration but also affect normal neuronal development.
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PMID:Clinical and neuropathological features of X-linked spinal muscular atrophy (SMAX2) associated with a novel mutation in the UBA1 gene. 2351 11