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)

Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy (OPMD) is a late-onset autosomal dominant muscular dystrophy which presents typically after the age of 50 with progressive eyelid drooping and an increasing difficulty in swallowing. Though OPMD has a world-wide incidence, it is more common in the French Canadian population. We have identified a homogeneous group of families and studied 166 polymorphic markers as part of a genome search before establishing linkage to chromosome 14. We determined that the OPMD locus maps to a less than 5 cM region of chromosome 14q11.2-q13. The maximum two-point lod score in three French Canadian families of 14.73 (theta = 0.03) was obtained for an intronic cardiac beta myosin heavy chain gene (MYH7) marker. The regional localization for the OPMD locus raises the intriguing possibility that either the cardiac alpha or beta myosin heavy chain genes may play a role in this disease.
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PMID:The oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy locus maps to the region of the cardiac alpha and beta myosin heavy chain genes on chromosome 14q11.2-q13. 779 98

Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy (OPMD) is a late onset autosomal dominant muscular dystrophy with a high prevalence in the French Canadian population. We report linkage analysis with 7 chromosome 14q polymorphic markers in 11 large French Canadian families. An observed recombination in one family establishes D14S283 as the new centromeric flanking marker, therefore reducing the previously reported candidate interval from 5cM to 2cM. The highest two-point LOD score was 26.05 at theta = 0.01 for MYH7.1. Multipoint analysis suggested that the OPMD genes lies within a 1.5cM region around D14S990. This study of large French Canadian families underlines the great power of this population to fine map disease genes.
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PMID:Using the full power of linkage analysis in 11 French Canadian families to fine map the oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy gene. 939 20

Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy (OPMD) is an autosomal dominant muscular dystrophy characterized by late onset ptosis, proximal muscle weakness and swallowing difficulties. This disease has been recently linked to chromosome 14q11.2-q13 in French-Canadian pedigrees. We studied three unrelated American families with OPMD of Hispanic descent and our results indicate that in this ethnic group, this disease also maps to chromosome 14q11.2-q13 (marker MYH7.24; Zmax = 3.98; theta max = 0). These results represent an independent demonstration of disease linkage in a second distinct ethnic group. Furthermore, our analysis demonstrates a unique haplotype that is shared by affected individuals from all three families suggesting a founder effect for OPMD in this population. Meiotic recombinants and radiation hybrid mapping permit the narrowing of the critical region to 1 Mb which will facilitate positional cloning of the OPMD disease gene.
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PMID:Genetic mapping and haplotype analysis of oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy. 960 50

Distal myopathies are a heterogeneous group of genetic disorders characterized clinically by progressive muscular weakness and atrophy beginning in the hands or feet, and pathologically by myopathic changes in skeletal muscles. Five distinct distal myopathies are identified, among them four have been recently defined by their gene and causative mutations. They are classified according to age at onset, mode of inheritance, and muscle groups initially involved into the following: Laing myopathy (infancy onset, autosomal dominant inheritance, onset in anterior compartment of legs) caused by mutations in a myosin gene (MYH7) on chromosome 14q; Nonaka myopathy (early adult onset, autosomal recessive inheritance, onset in anterior compartment of legs), identical to quadriceps-sparing familial inclusion myopathy, caused by mutations in the GNE gene on chromosome 9p-q; Miyoshi myopathy (early adult onset, autosomal recessive inheritance, onset in posterior compartment of legs) caused by mutations in the dysferlin gene on chromosome 2p; Welander myopathy (late adult onset, autosomal dominant inheritance, onset in hands) linked to chromosome 2p; Udd/Markesbery-Griggs myopathy (late adult onset, autosomal dominant inheritance, onset in anterior compartment of legs) caused by mutations in the titin gene on chromosome 2q. Except for Miyoshi myopathy, which has a striking elevated serum creatine kinase level and the typical findings of muscular dystrophy, most of the distal myopathies have normal or midly elevated creatine kinase levels and share the common pathologic feature of rimmed vacuoles.
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PMID:[Distal myopathies]. 1503 79