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Query: UMLS:C0086543 (
cataract
)
29,165
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Red cells and the lens of the eye are non-nucleated cells; moreover, they have metabolic similarities.
Cataracts
develop in childhood in homozygotes for galactosaemic abnormalities, which can be detected by biochemical measurements in red blood-cells. It has not been determined whether heterozygotes for these defects are at greater risk for
cataract
development later in life. Similarly, riboflavin deficiecy for which the erythrocyte is a sensitive indicator, has been associated with cataracts in animals. Red-cell studies were carried out in 22 patients, aged under 50, with cataracts. Heterozygosity for
galactokinase
deficiency was detected in 5 patients, for galactose-uridyl transferase in 2, and evidence of an erythrocytic deficiency of riboflavin in 8. Even when Black subjects were excluded from analysis because of their high incidence of polymorphism for
galactokinase
, these findings are significantly different from those expected from population surveys and suggest that many patients with presenile cataracts have a biochemical abnormality which can be detected by examination of red blood-cells and which may be corrected by dietary restrictions or supplements.
...
PMID:Association of presenile cataracts with heterozygosity for galactosaemic states and with riboflavin deficiency. 7 95
Activity of
galactokinase
(69 subjects) and galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase (92 subjects) were measured in haemolysed blood from children (predominantly of school age) with congenital
cataract
. chi2 tests, gene-frequency determination and metabolic-kinetic studies indicated that the changes in the lens in congenital
cataract
are partly due to a manifest or latent disorder of galactose metabolism, in particular a glactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase defect.
...
PMID:[Activity of enzymes of galactose metabolism in so-called congenital cataract (author's transl)]. 16 35
Erythrocytic
galactokinase
and/or galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase activity were low in many species of marsupials. However,
cataract
formation was observed only in pouch-young members of these species when reared on cow's milk. The galactose tolerance of young kangaroos was found to be greatly impaired, but improved rapidly and markedly at the stage of which the definitive structure of the ruminant type of stomach as in adults is formed. The combination of high absorption of galactose and low levels of
galactokinase
and/or transferase thus appears to determine the predisposition of pouch-young marsupials to galactose cataractogenesis.
...
PMID:Galactose metabolism in relation to cataract formation in marsupials. 17 38
Cultured fibroblasts derived from a patient homozygous for
galactokinase
deficiency, his parents, and controls had similar rates of growth in culture media where the only hexose was glucose. However, in media where the only hexose was galactose there was almost no growth of homozygous mutant cells or of maternal heterozygous cells and slight growth of paternal heterozygous cells. Growth of control cells was initially slow, but after a lag period (which coincided with increasing
galactokinase
activity) growth reached approximately the same levels as in glucose medium. In all cell lines there was a direct relation between the degree of enhancement of
galactokinase
activity and the ability of cells to adapt to growth in media where the only hexose was galactose. Erythrocyte
galactokinase
activities in a series of 24 children children with congenital cataracts aged 2-16 years were similar to those in 26 controls. One child in each of the
cataract
and control groups had 40-50% of mean control activity and was considered to be a potential heterozygote. Galactokinase deficiency (homozygous and heterozygous) is considered to be an uncommon cause of childhood cataracts. Nevertheless, it is an important cause since early dietary treatment can prevent or reverse lens opacities. The heterozygous state may be expressed phenotypically in the patient by the appearance of cataracts and in cultured cells by their defective growth in media where galactose is the only hexose.
...
PMID:Phenotypic expression of galactokinase deficiency in heterozygous and homozygous subjects: in vivo and in vitro studies. 18 97
Report of a case of galactosemia due to
galactokinase
deficiency. The author recalls the clinical (opacity of the lens) and biological features (important galactosuria, gallactiloluria, normal aminoaciduria, minimal hyperglycemia following galactose load). Since symptoms of increased intracranial pressure were present in this case, as in another one previously described, the commonly accepted statement that
cataract
is the only lesion in
galactokinase
deficiency must be reconsidered.
...
PMID:[Cataract due to galactokinase deficiency in a premature infant]. 18 81
It was established earlier that the maintenance of rats on a galactose-rich diet induced in rat liver a sequental induction of enzymes, converting galactose to glucose (
galactokinase
, galactoso-1-phosphaturidytransferase and uridyndiphosphogalactose-4-epimerase); this was followed by the repression of these enzymes. Against the background of the enzyme repression, the continuation of galactose treatment leads to the development of galactosemia symptoms; cataracts, liver lesions growth retardation. Animals with the increased susceptibility to galactose were found in population of Wistar rats; in these animals rapidly developing enzyme induction is followed by sharp repression of enzymes of the galactose metabolism and in them cataracts appear 17-19 days after the start of feeding a galactose-rich diet. A part of the population is resistant to the galactosemic effect of galactose and in these animals cataracts develope only 40-44 days after the beginning of the galactose feeding. By inbreeding of individuals extremely susceptible to galactose and those resistant to it, new substrains of rats were obtained. It is found that in the rats of the galactose-susceptible substrain a number of galactosemic features develope spontaneously and that these features are inheritable. Thus, 85% of the animals of the age of 2.5-6 months have
cataract
, lens opacities and other lens impairments. In the galactose-resistant substrain no cataracts or lens opacities develope and only slight changes of the lens are observed in 15% of the animals. In the susceptible substrain other features characteristic of galactosemia occur: an increase in the size of thymus, spleen and liver. It is established that in 3.5-5 month old rats of the galactose-susceptible substrain the galactoso-1 phosphaturidyltransferase activity in blood hemolysates is 15 times lower than in rats of galactose-resistant substrain, and in liver the activity of this enzyme is 1.4 times lower. The activity of liver
galactokinase
and uridyldiphosphogalactose-4-epimerase is slightly higher in rats of galactose-susceptible substrain than in galactose-resistant 1.
...
PMID:[Development of a rat subline with symptoms of hereditary galactosemia and study of its biochemical characteristics]. 124 Aug 12
The growth of Chinese hamster somatic cells was inhibited by 0.2 mg/cc of 2-deoxygalactose. Mutants partially or fully resistant to 2-deoxygalactose were isolated in a single-step or two-step selection. Some of them did not grow as well as the wild type; one of them which lacked
galactokinase
(EC.2.7.1.6) activity did not grow at all in galactose medium. The
galactokinase
kinetic properties (Vmax & kmax of the other mutants and of the wild type were different. Therefore resistance resulted either from the possible absence of
galactokinase
synthesis or from a structural mutation, possible a missence mutation, in the
galactokinase
gene.- A simple diagnostic test for juvenile
cataract
is proposed.
...
PMID:Galactokinase mutants of Chinese hamster somatic cells resistant to 2-deoxygalactose. 126 16
The activity of
galactokinase
in red blood cells of 30 patients affected by idiophatic presenile and senile
cataract
, and of 20 age-matched controls with perfectly transparent lenses, was investigated. The results obtained show a partial deficiency of the
galactokinase
activity in the patients affected by presenile idiopathic
cataract
. There is, moreover, a significant relationship between the cortical form of
cataract
and enzymatic reduction.
...
PMID:Galactokinase activity in patients with idiopathic presenile and senile cataract. 130 5
The activity of
galactokinase
in red blood cells, has been assayed in 17 patients with idiopathic senile and presenile
cataract
and in 12 age-matched subjects with perfectly transparent lenses. 3 of the idiopathic
cataract
patients (17.6%) showed low erythrocytes GK activity, while nobody in the control group showed reduced GK activity. Although preliminary, our results seem to support the possibility that a chronic disorder of galactose metabolism may be involved in the pathogenesis of the idiopathic senile and presenile
cataract
.
...
PMID:[Measurement of the erythrocyte galactokinase activity in patients with presenile and senile idiopathic cataract. Preliminary study]. 207 90
133 patients with congenital or idiopathic cataracts were studied (94 patients had ages between 1 month and 14 years; 10 patients had ages between 16 and 50 years and 29 patients did not have an age registry) along with 18 patients with a clinical diagnosis of classic galactosemia. The activity of
galactokinase
(GALAK) and that of erythrocyte galactose-1-phosphate uridyl transferase (GALT) was measured. There were no individuals with a total deficiency of GALK or GALT. The
cataract
patients of ages between 1 monthly and 14 years, 3 (3.19%) and 4 (4.25%) showed GALK and GALT levels in the range corresponding to the respective heterozygotes. As compared with the expected incidence of heterozygotes in the general population (0.2% for GALK and 0.8% for GALT) we found a significant rise of individuals with low levels of enzymes for the metabolism of galactose. The possibility that heterozygote galactosemic states contribute a risk factor in the development of cataracts and its therapeutic implications are discussed.
...
PMID:[Identification of inborn errors of galactose metabolism in patients with cataracts]. 210
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