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Query: UMLS:C0848332 (
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453
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Von Recklinghausen's disease, or neurofibromatosis type 1 (NF-1), is an autosomal dominant syndrome with a highly variable tumorous (neurofibromas, gliomas, Wilms' tumors,
leukemia
, pheochromocytomas) and non-tumorous (cafe-au-lait
skin spots
, iris and ciliar hamartomas, osseous lesions) manifestations. NF-1 gene is mapped to chromosome 17. Central or bilateral acoustic neurofibromatosis (NF-2) has a gene mapped to chromosome 22. Hereditary and sporadic NF-1 are recognized. The most typical manifestation of NF-1-skin neurofibroma--has has a characteristic plexiform structure. Spectrum of tumors (schwannomas, gliomas, Wilms' tumors) produced by transplacental treatment with strong environmental mutagens-carcinogens-ethylnitroso- and methylnitrosourea (ENU and MNU, respectively) resembles on the whole that observed in human sporadic NF-1. Location of neurofibromas depends on the species: skin and subcutaneous tissue in humans, cattle and hamsters, trigeminal nerve, spinal roots in rats. Rat schwannomas differ from human neurofibromas by malignant structure, frequently with cystic component, but if induced by ENU treatment at day 15 of the pregnancy they resemble human plexiform neurofibromas with intraneural and extraneural growth of tumor cells. There were attempts to reproduce a transgenerational transmission of ENU carcinogenic effect, i.e. hereditary form of NF-1. In the experiments of this type the offsprings of rats prenatally treated with ENU remained untreated. The incidence of PNS, CNS and Wilms' tumors in these untreated offsprings in some experiments was significantly higher than in controls thus confirming the possibility, in principle, of hereditary NF-1 modelling. Only 10% of tumors developing in such untreated descendants of ENU treated parents contained a specific mutation of neu oncogene compared to 90-100% in tumors arising following direct treatment with ENU. The mechanisms of the transgenerational carcinogenesis are discussed. Lesions imitating NF-1 and in part NF-2 in transgenic mice with an HTLV-1-tax gene as well as in p-53 knockout mice are mentioned.
...
PMID:[Von Recklinghausen's disease: experimental models and comparative aspects]. 900 21
Fanconi anaemia (FA) is a genetic disease characterised by bone marrow failure with excess risk of myelogenous
leukaemia
and solid tumours. A widely accepted notion in FA research invokes a deficiency of response to DNA damage as the fundamental basis of the 'crosslinker sensitivity' observed in this disorder. However, such an isolated defect cannot readily account for the full cellular and clinical phenotype, which includes a number of other abnormalities, such as malformations, endocrinopathies, and typical
skin spots
. An extensive body of evidence pointing toward an involvement of oxidative stress in the FA phenotype includes the following: (i) In vitro and ex vivo abnormalities in a number of redox status endpoints; (ii) the functions of several FA proteins in protecting cells from oxidative stress; (iii) redox-related toxicity mechanisms of the xenobiotics evoking excess toxicity in FA cells. The clinical features in FA and the in vivo abnormalities of redox parameters are here reconsidered in view of the pleiotropic clinical phenotype and known biochemical and molecular links to an in vivo prooxidant state, which causes oxidative damage to biomolecules, resulting in an excessive number of acquired abnormalities that may overwhelm the cellular repair capacity rather than a primary deficiency in DNA repair. FA may thus represent a unique model disease in testing the integration between the acquisition of macromolecular damage as a result of oxidative stress and the ability of the mammalian cell to respond effectively to such damage.
...
PMID:Oxidative stress as a multiple effector in Fanconi anaemia clinical phenotype. 1600 Jan 25