Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Biotin-deficient conditions are frequently associated with epileptic disorders. Biotin deficiency may be caused by long-term treatment with anticonvulsants or excessive ingestion of avidin. Absence of biotinidase activity can also lead to biotin deficiency, and is characterized by developmental delay as well as neurological and dermatological abnormalities. Because seizures are one of the most frequent signs of the latter, biotin-deficient conditions could conceivably facilitate convulsive disorders. To test this hypothesis, we investigated the occurrence of a latent kindling hyperexcitability in biotin-deprived rats. In these animals, duration of after-discharge on the first stimulation was longer at threshold amplitude, kindling development through its early stages was accelerated and duration of the forelimb clonus of fully kindled seizures was increased. Biotin deprivation in mixed cerebellar granule cell-astrocyte cultures also produced a tetrodotoxin-sensitive delayed loss of the glutamatergic neuronal population. The data thus support a facilitatory role for biotin-deficient conditions in convulsive disorders.
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PMID:Biotin deficiency facilitates kindling hyperexcitability in rats. 890 56

Biotin is a water-soluble vitamin that serves as an essential coenzyme for five carboxylases in mammals. Biotin-dependent carboxylases catalyze the fixation of bicarbonate in organic acids and play crucial roles in the metabolism of fatty acids, amino acids and glucose. Carboxylase activities decrease substantially in response to biotin deficiency. Biotin is also covalently attached to histones; biotinylated histones are enriched in repeat regions in the human genome and appear to play a role in transcriptional repression of genes and genome stability. Biotin deficiency may be caused by insufficient dietary uptake of biotin, drug-vitamin interactions and, perhaps, by increased biotin catabolism during pregnancy and in smokers. Biotin deficiency can also be precipitated by decreased activities of the following proteins that play critical roles in biotin homeostasis: the vitamin transporters sodium-dependent multivitamin transporter and monocarboxylate transporter 1, which mediate biotin transport in the intestine, liver and peripheral tissues, and renal reabsorption; holocarboxylase synthetase, which mediates the binding of biotin to carboxylases and histones; and biotinidase, which plays a central role in the intestinal absorption of biotin, the transport of biotin in plasma and the regulation of histone biotinylation. Symptoms of biotin deficiency include seizures, hypotonia, ataxia, dermatitis, hair loss, mental retardation, ketolactic acidosis, organic aciduria and also fetal malformations. This review focuses on the deficiencies of both biotin and biotinidase, and the medical management of such cases.
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PMID:Biotin and biotinidase deficiency. 1972 38