Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026850 (muscular dystrophy)
5,870 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Congenital malformations and inherited disorders constitute a substantial proportion of the afflictions seen in sheep and goats. Of these, malformations tend to be similar in both species, whereas the genetic diseases encountered to date, with the exception of a few, are different. Of the 28 genetic diseases of sheep and goats described in this review, 60% and 62.5%, respectively, are monogenic disorders. For a majority of the monogenic recessive disorders encountered in these species, the carrier state is not detectable at present, whereas in others, in which a biochemical lesion is known (dermatosparaxis, erythrocyte glutathione deficiency, globoid cell leukodystrophy and glycogen storage disease), the carrier state is detectable with the aid of enzyme and surface protein markers. The latter group and the dominant disorders (anury, cataract, glomerulonephritis, and lethal grey in sheep; gynecomastia and anotia-microtia complex in goats) are easy to eliminate through selective breeding. The polygenic disorders (entropion, epidermolysis bullosa, hereditary chondrodysplasia, and muscular dystrophy of sheep, and udder problems in goats) are more difficult to eradicate, because the mutant genes responsible for these traits generally do not declare themselves until inbreeding brings together a critical concentration to create a health crisis in some, whereas others, which are only short of a few of these mutant genes, might go totally unaffected and therefore undetected. Chromosome defects of the structural nature (translocations) seen in sheep and goats generally create meiotic disturbances, which in a majority of cases lead to subfertility, whereas sex chromosome aneuploids are generally sterile.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Genetic diseases of sheep and goats. 224 74

Cardiac ankyrin-repeated protein (CARP) was originally identified as a protein specifically expressed in cardiomyocytes, but has recently been found to be upregulated in some muscle diseases including muscular dystrophy and myopathy, suggesting that CARP may be induced in some pathologic conditions. In this study, we immunohistochemically analyzed 69 renal biopsy samples from patients with glomerular diseases and 2 individuals with normal kidney. We found that CARP was expressed in renal podocytes at a high level in 10 of 13 cases of crescentic glomerulonephritis, 7 of 19 cases of diabetic nephropathy, and 12 of 20 cases of lupus nephritis, although it was not expressed in endocapillary glomerulonephritis, minimal change disease, thin basement membrane disease, membranous glomerulonephritis, and normal kidney. Interestingly, in lupus nephritis, CARP expression tended to be induced in cases exhibiting nephrotic syndrome, but less so in cases without nephrotic syndrome, suggesting that CARP expression is correlated with the severity of proteinuria. Furthermore, we found that CARP was not expressed in membranous glomerulonephritis but evidently expressed in most cases of membranous lupus nephritis. Although membranous glomerulonephritis and membranous lupus nephritis are sometimes morphologically indistinguishable, it is suggested that their pathologic mechanisms differ. Therefore, we propose that examination of CARP expression is useful for precise differential diagnosis of membranous glomerulonephritis and membranous lupus nephritis.
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PMID:Upregulated expression of cardiac ankyrin-repeated protein in renal podocytes is associated with proteinuria severity in lupus nephritis. 1723 33