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)

A 51-year-old man developed weakness and muscle atrophy in the legs at the age of 41, later followed by choreiform involuntary movements. Neurological and laboratory examinations revealed severe muscle weakness and atrophy, and areflexia in all the extremities, acanthocytosis and an elevated serum creatine kinase level. Together with these findings, the weak expression of Kell blood group antigens and the absence of the Kx antigen led to a definite diagnosis of McLeod syndrome for his condition. Brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed marked atrophy of the head of the caudate nuclei. Although immunocytochemical analysis of dystrophin in muscle specimens from our patient revealed normal staining, we found prominent fiber size variability, central nuclei, and connective tissue proliferation as well as necrotic and regenerating fibers, which are as a whole compatible with the myopathology of muscular dystrophy. Moreover, muscle computerized tomography of the lower extremities revealed the 'selectivity pattern' characteristically reported in muscular dystrophies including Duchenne type muscular dystrophy. The muscular symptoms and pathology in McLeod syndrome have been reported to be mild, but the present case clearly shows that the muscular features in this condition may be much more severe than previously thought.
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PMID:A case of McLeod syndrome with unusually severe myopathy. 1046 97

Two membrane proteins express the antigens that comprise the Kell blood group system. A single antigen, Kx, is carried on XK, a 440-amino acid protein that spans the membrane 10 times, and more than 20 antigens reside on Kell, a 93-kd, type II glycoprotein. XK and Kell are linked, close to the membrane surface, by a single disulfide bond between Kell cysteine 72 and XK cysteine 347. Although primarily expressed in erythroid tissues, Kell and XK are also present in many other tissues. The polymorphic forms of Kell are due to single base mutations that encode different amino acids. Some Kell antigens are highly immunogenic and may cause strong reactions if mismatched blood is transfused and severe fetal anemia in sensitized mothers. Antibodies to KEL1 may suppress erythropoiesis at the progenitor level, leading to fetal anemia. The cellular functions of Kell/XK are complex. Absence of XK, the McLeod phenotype, is associated with acanthocytic red blood cells (RBCs), and with late-onset forms of muscular dystrophy and nerve abnormalities. Kell, by homology, is a member of the neprilysin (M13) family of membrane zinc endopeptidases and it preferentially activates endothelin-3 by specific cleavage of the Trp21-Ile22 bond of big endothelin-3.
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PMID:The Kell blood group system: Kell and XK membrane proteins. 1079 80