Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (prolapse)
11,717 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A woman was referred with severe orthostatic hypotension at the age of 21. Ptosis, skeletal muscle hypotonia, and recurrent hypoglycaemia had been noticed in early childhood. There was noradrenergic denervation and adrenomedullary failure but baroreflex afferents, cholinergic innervation, and adrenocortical function were intact. Noradrenaline and adrenaline were undetectable in plasma, urine, and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), but dopamine was 7-fold to 12-fold normal in plasma, 4-fold normal in urine, and 20-fold normal in CSF. Measurements of catecholamine metabolites showed further evidence for impairment of noradrenaline and adrenaline biosynthesis due to deficient dopamine-beta-hydroxylation. Dopamine-beta-hydroxylase was undetectable in plasma and CSF. Physiological and pharmacological stimuli of sympathetic neurotransmitter release caused increases in plasma dopamine rather than plasma noradrenaline.
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PMID:Congenital dopamine-beta-hydroxylase deficiency. A novel orthostatic syndrome. 288 16

Chronic administration of guanethidine to adult rats induces a selective autoimmune adrenergic neuropathy. Physiological and biochemical features of this disorder in the peripheral nervous system were explored in young adult Sprague-Dawley rats given daily intraperitoneal guanethidine monosulfate for 5 weeks. Control rats received daily saline injections. The guanethidine-treated animals gained less weight, had ptosis, and had a lower mean arterial blood pressure in the supine and upright tilted positions. Norepinephrine was depleted in the peroneal, sural, tibial, and vagal nerves, the nutrient artery to the tibial nerve and in the superior cervical sympathetic ganglion of the drug-treated animals. On light microscopy, there was an inflammatory cell infiltrate and neuron loss in the superior cervical ganglion. Caudal and sciatic-tibial nerve conduction values were well preserved in the guanethidine-treated animals as was the 'C' potential derived from unmyelinated vagal fibers recorded in an in vitro chamber. The 'C' potential recorded from the cervical sympathetic trunk, however, was reduced in amplitude correlating with the loss of norepinephrine content in the harvested contralateral superior cervical sympathetic ganglion. The findings further support the view that guanethidine produces a selective adrenergic neuropathy in the rat--providing a useful standard with which to gauge autonomic involvement in other models of neuropathy. In addition, loss of the cervical sympathetic 'C' potential suggests that this presumed preganglionic structure also contains postganglionic adrenergic fibers.
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PMID:Guanethidine adrenergic neuropathy: an animal model of selective autonomic neuropathy. 322 70

Norepinephrine (NE), a vital neurotransmitter in both the central and peripheral nervous systems, is synthesized by dopamine beta-hydroxylase (DBH) through the oxidation of dopamine (DA) to NE. DBH deficiency is a congenital disorder characterized by severe orthostatic hypotension, ptosis, and retrograde ejaculation. Biochemical features of the syndrome include elevated levels of dopamine, undetectable levels of DBH, undetectable tissue and circulating levels of NE and epinephrine. Molecular genetic analysis studies suggested that DBH deficiency is a Mendelian recessive disorder attributable to heterogenous mutations at the DBH locus. DBH deficiency has been treated effectively with L-threo-3,4-dihydroxyphenylserine (DOPS). DOPS is converted directly to NE through decarboxylation by L-aromatic amino acid decarboxylase (AADC), thereby bypassing DBH. Orthostatic intolerance is a syndrome characterized by lightheadedness, fatigue, altered mentation, syncope, and postural tachycardia. Biochemical features may include plasma NE concentration that is disproportionately high in relation to sympathetic outflow, decreased NE clearance with standing, resistance to the NE-releasing effect of tyramine, and increased sensitivity to adrenergic agonists. A subset of OI patients has pathophysiologic features that have been associated with a genetic polymorphism. The coding mutation, A457P, occurs in one of the alleles of norepinephrine transporter gene of a proband with OI and her family. Alpha-methyl dopa, beta blockers and clonidine, a partial agonist of alpha2-adrenoceptor that acts centrally to reduce sympathetic outflow and lower blood pressure, have been effective in the treatment of this condition. The identification of the genetic polymorphisms involved in the synthesis, transport, storage, and metabolism of the catecholamines may provide new insights into the diagnosis and management of autonomic, cardiovascular, endocrine and psychiatric disorders.
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PMID:The broader view: catecholamine abnormalities. 1210 62

Norepinephrine and epinephrine are critical determinants of minute-to-minute regulation of blood pressure. Here we review the characterization of two syndromes associated with a genetic abnormality in the noradrenergic pathway. In 1986, we reported a congenital syndrome of undetectable tissue and circulating levels of norepinephrine and epinephrine, elevated levels of dopamine, and absence of dopamine-beta-hydroxylase (DBH). These patients appeared with ptosis and severe orthostatic hypotension and lacked sympathetic noradrenergic function. In two persons with DBH deficiency, we identified seven novel polymorphisms. Both patients are compound heterozygotes for a variant that affects expression of DBH protein via impairment of splicing. Patient 1 also has a missense mutation in DBH exon 2, and patient 2 carries missense mutations in exons 1 and 6. Orthostatic intolerance is a common syndrome affecting young women, presenting with orthostatic tachycardia and symptoms of cerebral hypoperfusion on standing. We tested the hypothesis that abnormal norepinephrine transporter (NET) function might contribute to its etiology. In our proband, we found an elevated plasma norepinephrine with standing that was disproportionate to the increase in levels of dihydroxphenylglycol, as well as impaired norepinephrine clearance and tyramine resistance. Studies of NET gene structure revealed a coding mutation converting a conserved alanine residue in transmembrane domain 9 to proline. Analysis of the protein produced by the mutant cDNA demonstrated greater than 98% reduction in activity relative to normal. The finding of genetic mutations responsible for DBH deficiency and orthostatic intolerance leads us to believe that genetic causes of other autonomic disorders will be found, enabling us to design more effective therapeutic interventions.
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PMID:Genetic basis of clinical catecholamine disorders. 1243 71