Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0235394 (wasting)
8,040 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Duchenne muscular dystrophy is a severe X chromosome-linked, muscle-wasting disease caused by lack of the protein dystrophin. The exact function of dystrophin remains to be determined. However, analysis of its interaction with a large oligomeric protein complex at the sarcolemma and the identification of a structurally related protein, utrophin, is leading to the characterization of candidate genes for other neuromuscular disorders.
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PMID:Increasing complexity of the dystrophin-associated protein complex. 807 78

During the past year significant progress has been made in understanding how dystrophin deficiency leads to muscle cell necrosis in Duchenne muscular dystrophy and Becker muscular dystrophy. Dystrophin interacts with a glycoprotein complex spanning the muscle sarcolemma, effectively linking the actin cytoskeleton to the extracellular matrix. The carboxyl terminus of dystrophin is required for glycoprotein binding. Interestingly, at least three mRNAs transcribed from the distal end of the DMD gene in tissues other than muscle have been shown to encode this domain. Deficiency of a second component of the dystrophin-associated glycoprotein complex has been shown to occur in another muscle-wasting disorder, severe childhood autosomal recessive muscular dystrophy. Sequence analysis of the entire cDNA for the autosomal dystrophin-related protein utrophin has shown that dystrophin and utrophin are closely related. Furthermore, both of these proteins have been shown to bind to the same or a similar glycoprotein complex in muscle.
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PMID:Dystrophin and related proteins. 835 25

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a severe, progressive muscle-wasting disease that causes cardiac or respiratory failure and results in death at about 20 years of age. Replacement of the missing protein, dystrophin, using myoblast transfer in humans or viral/liposomal delivery in the mouse DMD model is inefficient and short-lived. One alternative approach to treatment would be to upregulate the closely related protein, utrophin, which might be able to compensate for the dystrophin deficiency in all relevant muscles. As a first step to this approach, we have expressed a utrophin transgene at high levels in the dystrophin-deficient mdx mouse. Our results indicate that high expression of the utrophin transgene in skeletal and diaphragm muscle can markedly reduce the dystrophic pathology. These data suggest that systemic upregulation of utrophin in DMD patients may lead to the development of an effective treatment for this devastating disorder.
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PMID:Amelioration of the dystrophic phenotype of mdx mice using a truncated utrophin transgene. 893 8

The absence of dystrophin at the muscle membrane leads to Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), a severe muscle-wasting disease that is inevitably fatal in early adulthood. In contrast, dystrophin-deficient mdx mice appear physically normal despite their underlying muscle pathology. We describe mice deficient for both dystrophin and the dystrophin-related protein utrophin. These mice show many signs typical of DMD in humans: they show severe progressive muscular dystrophy that results in premature death, they have ultrastructural neuromuscular and myotendinous junction abnormalities, and they aberrantly coexpress myosin heavy chain isoforms within a fiber. The data suggest that utrophin and dystrophin have complementing roles in normal functional or developmental pathways in muscle. Detailed study of these mice should provide novel insights into the pathogenesis of DMD and provide an improved model for rapid evaluation of gene therapy strategies.
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PMID:Utrophin-dystrophin-deficient mice as a model for Duchenne muscular dystrophy. 928 51

Dystrophin is a cytoskeletal protein of muscle fibers; its loss in humans leads to Duchenne muscular dystrophy, an inevitably fatal wasting of skeletal and cardiac muscle. mdx mice also lack dystrophin, but are only mildly dystrophic. Utrophin, a homolog of dystrophin, is confined to the postsynaptic membrane at skeletal neuromuscular junctions and has been implicated in synaptic development. However, mice lacking utrophin show only subtle neuromuscular defects. Here, we asked whether the mild phenotypes of the two single mutants reflect compensation between the two proteins. Synaptic development was qualitatively normal in double mutants, but dystrophy was severe and closely resembled that seen in Duchenne. Thus, utrophin attenuates the effects of dystrophin deficiency, and the double mutant may provide a useful model for studies of pathogenesis and therapy.
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PMID:Skeletal and cardiac myopathies in mice lacking utrophin and dystrophin: a model for Duchenne muscular dystrophy. 928 52

We present here a 28-year-old male patient with Becker muscular dystrophy whose skeletal muscle showed an absence of dystrophin. He has had progressive and predominantly proximal muscular wasting since 5 years of age, but was able to walk until 26 years of age. He showed hypertrophic calves, cardiomyopathy, and an elevated serum creatine kinase level (934 U/1). A skeletal muscle biopsy revealed advanced chronic myopathic changes. Immunohistochemical examination using anti-dystrophin antibodies against C-terminus showed deficiency of the protein. Rod domain and N-terminus were also absent in almost all muscle fibers, but only in a small part of the sample, they were faintly stained. beta-Dystroglycan and utrophin were present only in a small number of muscle fibers. DNA and RT-PCR analysis showed a frame-shift deletion of exons 3-7 in the dystrophin gene. In such an exceptional case as this one, it is important to investigate the factors which determine the severity of dystrophinopathy.
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PMID:Undetectable dystrophin can still result in a relatively benign phenotype of dystrophinopathy. 1039 48

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is an inherited muscle-wasting disease caused by the absence of a muscle cytoskeletal protein, dystrophin. We have previously shown that utrophin, the autosomal homologue of dystrophin, is able to compensate for the absence of dystrophin in a mouse model of DMD; we have therefore undertaken a detailed study of the transcriptional regulation of utrophin to identify means of effecting its up-regulation in DMD muscle. We have previously isolated a promoter element lying within the CpG island at the 5' end of the gene and have shown it to be synaptically regulated in vivo. In this paper, we show that there is an alternative promoter lying within the large second intron of the utrophin gene, 50 kb 3' to exon 2. The promoter is highly regulated and drives transcription of a widely expressed unique first exon that splices into a common full-length mRNA at exon 3. The two utrophin promoters are independently regulated, and we predict that they respond to discrete sets of cellular signals. These findings significantly contribute to understanding the molecular physiology of utrophin expression and are important because the promoter reported here provides an alternative target for transcriptional activation of utrophin in DMD muscle. This promoter does not contain synaptic regulatory elements and might, therefore, be a more suitable target for pharmacological manipulation than the previously described promoter.
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PMID:A second promoter provides an alternative target for therapeutic up-regulation of utrophin in Duchenne muscular dystrophy. 1057 Jan 92

Muscular dystrophy is a nosology for a group of hereditary muscle disorders characterized by progressive wasting and weakness of skeletal muscle, where degeneration of muscle fibers is detected by pathological examination. Since the causative gene of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), the most severe and abundant form of muscular dystrophy, the DMD gene, and its product dystrophin was isolated by positional cloning by Dr. Kunkel and his colleagues, the studies on molecular pathologies of muscular dystrophy has been extensively developed. The current therapeutic approaches of muscular dystrophy, such as DMD involves pharmacological suppression of the inflammatory and immure responses, which usually provides only modest and temporary beneficial effects. Future approaches depend on cell and gene therapy technology and will require different strategies, none of which are currently ready to enter clinical practice. These approaches involve the efficient, non-antigenic gene transfer for in vivo gene therapy, pharmacological upregulation of the synthesis of utrophin, a related protein that compensates for the loss of dystrophin, and myogenic stem cell transplantation. These approaches could be integrated each other and called as molecular therapy.
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PMID:[Molecular therapy of muscular dystrophy]. 1146 75

The X-linked muscle-wasting disease Duchenne muscular dystrophy is caused by mutations in the gene encoding dystrophin. There is currently no effective treatment for the disease; however, the complex molecular pathology of this disorder is now being unravelled. Dystrophin is located at the muscle sarcolemma in a membrane-spanning protein complex that connects the cytoskeleton to the basal lamina. Mutations in many components of the dystrophin protein complex cause other forms of autosomally inherited muscular dystrophy, indicating the importance of this complex in normal muscle function. Although the precise function of dystrophin is unknown, the lack of protein causes membrane destabilization and the activation of multiple pathophysiological processes, many of which converge on alterations in intracellular calcium handling. Dystrophin is also the prototype of a family of dystrophin-related proteins, many of which are found in muscle. This family includes utrophin and alpha-dystrobrevin, which are involved in the maintenance of the neuromuscular junction architecture and in muscle homeostasis. New insights into the pathophysiology of dystrophic muscle, the identification of compensating proteins, and the discovery of new binding partners are paving the way for novel therapeutic strategies to treat this fatal muscle disease. This review discusses the role of the dystrophin complex and protein family in muscle and describes the physiological processes that are affected in Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
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PMID:Function and genetics of dystrophin and dystrophin-related proteins in muscle. 1191 91

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a severe muscle-wasting disorder for which there is currently no effective treatment. This disorder is caused by mutations or deletions in the gene encoding dystrophin that prevent expression of dystrophin at the sarcolemma. A promising pharmacological treatment for DMD aims to increase levels of utrophin, a homolog of dystrophin, in muscle fibers of affected patients to compensate for the absence of dystrophin. Here, we review recent developments in our understanding of the regulatory pathways that govern utrophin expression, and highlight studies that have used activators of these pathways to alleviate the dystrophic symptoms in DMD animal models. The results of these preclinical studies are promising and bring us closer to implementing appropriate utrophin-based drug therapies for DMD patients.
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PMID:Utrophin upregulation for treating Duchenne or Becker muscular dystrophy: how close are we? 1644 93


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