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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)
Using a histochemical method,
5'-nucleotidase
activity was investigated in 80 muscle biopsy specimens, including specimens from eight patients with
muscular dystrophy
, 18 with nonspecific type II fiber atrophy, 15 with polymyositis, and 29 histologically normal controls. An interstitial reaction for
5'-nucleotidase
was associated with an inflammatory infiltrate in 19 of 21 positive cases. Of the 15 cases of polymyositis, 14 showed an extensive interstitial reaction surrounding most of the myofibers and extending well away from the areas infiltrated by inflammatory cells. The extensive nature of this reaction makes
5'-nucleotidase
activity a useful adjuvant in the diagnosis of inflammatory muscle disease.
...
PMID:Histochemical demonstration of 5'-nucleotidase activity in inflammatory muscle disease. 201 97
We applied a simple lead salt-based stain for interstitial and vascular
5'-nucleotidase
to 150 muscle biopsy specimens. No reaction was obtained with 2'- or 3'-adenosine monophosphate, indicating that the stain was specific, and distinct from phosphatases. Staining was not inhibited by alpha, beta-methylene adenosine 5'-diphosphate, but was prevented by formaldehyde fixation or by brief immersion in octoxynol 9 (Triton X-100). Nucleotidase stains the following specific histologic sites that distinguish it from alkaline phosphatase: the intima and adventitia of medium-sized and large arteries, perineural and muscle spindle sheaths, and tendon insertions. Aside from these structures, normal muscle shows little reaction, as the sarcoplasm and sarcolemma do not stain. Neither of these enzymes shows a compensatory increase, histochemically, in myo-adenylate deaminase deficiency. In Duchenne's
muscular dystrophy
, however, and particularly in inflammatory myopathy, interstitial staining of
5'-nucleotidase
is increased, leading to investment of most muscle fibers in the affected area. The stain rarely identifies regenerating fibers. Although alkaline phosphatase commonly shows a corresponding increase in interstitial staining, we encountered six cases of inflammatory myopathy in which this was absent, despite pronounced endomysial staining in the
5'-nucleotidase
reaction. 5'-Nucleotidase thus appears to provide a valuable adjunct in the diagnosis of inflammatory myopathy.
...
PMID:Interstitial 5'-nucleotidase stain for frozen biopsy specimens of skeletal muscle. A useful adjunct in the diagnosis of polymyositis. 619 1
Adenylosuccinase catalyses two reactions in purine metabolism: the conversion of succinylaminoimidazole carboxamide ribotide (SAICAR) into aminoimidazole carboxamide ribotide (AICAR) along the de novo synthesis of purine nucleotides, and the conversion of adenylosuccinate (S-AMP) into AMP in the conversion of IMP into AMP. The hallmarks of adenylosuccinase deficiency are the presence of succinylaminoimidazole carboxamide riboside (SAICAriboside) and succinyladenosine (S-Ado) in body fluids. These normally undetectable succinylpurines are the products of the dephosphorylation, by cytosolic
5'-nucleotidase
, of the two substrates of adenylosuccinase. The clinical picture of the enzyme deficiency is markedly heterogeneous with, as a rule, a profound, but nevertheless variable degree of psychomotor delay, often convulsions and/or autistic features, sometimes growth retardation and
muscular dystrophy
. The diagnostic tests that can be used for diagnosis, the enzyme and gene defects that have been identified, and the hypotheses that have been put forward to explain the pathophysiology of the disorder are reviewed.
...
PMID:Inborn errors of the purine nucleotide cycle: adenylosuccinase deficiency. 921 Nov 92