Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:Q00604 (X-linked)
16,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Ichthyosis follicularis (IF) is a rare disorder of keratinization that has been described primarily in males and proposed as a possible X-linked disorder. We report two black girls with nonscarring alopecia; photophobia; follicular hyperkeratoses; hyperkeratosis of the extensor aspects of the hands, knees, and elbows; fixed, erythematous, perineal plaques; and angular cheilitis who seem to fit the clinical criteria for IF. One girl also had gingival hypertrophy and a hearing deficit. One child's father had identical symptoms. We propose that these girls may have a variant of IF that is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait.
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PMID:Ichthyosis follicularis in two girls: an autosomal dominant disorder. 170 58

A 10-year follow-up of a family with X-linked cutaneous amyloidosis confirmed no more than streaks or spots of brown pigmentation of the skin in females but much more varied and severe manifestations in males. These included neonatal colitis, infantile diarrhea, recurrent respiratory infections, corneal dystrophy, photophobia, unruly hair with a frontal upsweep, dry skin, and mottled, muddy-brown pigmentation seen first on the inner thighs and spreading diffusely to the buttocks, trunk, and arms. Amyloid was found in the pigmented skin of adults of both sexes but not in children. An autopsy of a 50-year-old man, subject to recurrent pneumonia, confirmed the presence of amyloid in the skin, but it was not found in other organs. Changes in the lungs were those of late-stage diffuse pulmonary fibrosis. The pattern of inheritance is X-linked, but the pathogenesis remains obscure.
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PMID:X-linked cutaneous amyloidosis: further clinical and pathological observations. 270 73

X-linked reticulate pigmentary disorder (PDR), previously reported as X-linked cutaneous amyloidosis (MIM#301220), is characterized by brown pigmentation of the skin which follows the lines of Blaschko in females but appears as reticulate sheets in males. Males may suffer severe gastrointestinal disorders in infancy with failure to thrive and early death. Nowadays symptomatic treatment allows survival and other manifestations may appear such as corneal dystrophy with severe photophobia or chronic respiratory disease. Amyloid deposition in the skin may be no more than an age-dependent secondary manifestation. The PDR gene was localised by linkage analysis to Xp21-p22. The background genetic map is Xpter-DXS996-22.5-DXS207-3.3-DXS999-3.3-DXS36 5-14.2-DXS989-4.1-3'DMD-3.5- DXS997-1.0-STR44-9.3-DYSI-2.3-DXS1068-11.0-DX S228 with distances between markers given in cM. Recombinants detected with DXS999 distally and DXS228 proximally, define the limits to the localisation. Linkage was found with several markers within this interval. Peak lod scores of 3.21 at theta = 0.0 were obtained between PDR and DXS989 and between PDR and 5'DYSI within the dystrophin locus.
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PMID:Localisation of the gene for X-linked reticulate pigmentary disorder with systemic manifestations (PDR), previously known as X-linked cutaneous amyloidosis. 797 67

Another family manifesting an X-linked, reticulate, pigmentary dermatosis, previously familial cutaneous amyloidosis, has been observed. The disorder is characterized in males in this family by onset in the first year of recurrent episodes of respiratory illness including pneumonia, a progressive reticulate pigmentation of the skin, hypohidrosis, and photophobia. The absence of amyloid deposits in the skin in both the mother and sons confirms that less emphasis should be given to the word "amyloidosis" in naming the disorder.
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PMID:An X-linked reticulate pigmentary disorder with systemic manifestations: report of a second family. 830 37

Keratosis follicularis spinulosa decalvans (KFSD) is a rare X-linked disorder of keratinization of the hair follicle associated with corneal dystrophy. The clinical picture is characterized by solid follicular hyperkeratosis, especially on the exposed skin, sparse eyebrows/eyelashes, follicular scaling and scarring alopecia of the scalp, dry skin and ocular symptoms with keratitis and photophobia. We describe the three stages of the disease: onset, inflammation and partial remission and the treatment appropriate in each. Two patients in the inflammatory stage of KFSD, with recurrent deep, fibrosing folliculitis and perifolliculitis followed by spreading and scarring alopecia on the scalp, responded to oral therapy with retinoids. In both cases there was a distinct and lasting remission of the inflammation and stabilization of the spreading alopecia after treatment with etretinate (Tigason), up to 0.8 mg/kg body weight, or isotretinoin (Roaccutan), 0.5 mg/kg body weight, for 12 weeks. The follicular spinulous hyperkeratosis became softer, but persisted. Thus, oral therapy with retinoids appears helpful in the inflammatory stage of KFSD, even though there is little improvement in the follicular hyperkeratosis.
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PMID:[Keratosis follicularis spinulosa decalvans. Therapy with isotretinoin and etretinate in the inflammatory stage]. 837 8

Keratosis follicularis spinulosa decalvans is a rare, X-linked genodermatosis characterized by follicular hyperkeratosis, scarring alopecia of the scalp, eyebrows and eyelashes, corneal dystrophy and photophobia. We describe two cases from a large family, the first with keratosis follicularis spinulosa decalvans to be reported in the U.K.
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PMID:Keratosis follicularis spinulosa decalvans: report of a new pedigree. 874 1

Ocular albinism type I (OA1) is an X-linked disorder characterized by severe reduction of visual acuity, strabismus, photophobia and nystagmus. Ophthalmologic examination reveals hypopigmentation of the retina, foveal hypoplasia and iris translucency. Microscopic examination of both retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) and skin melanocytes shows the presence of large pigment granules called giant melanosomes or macromelanosomes. In this study, we have generated and characterized Oa1-deficient mice by gene targeting (KO). The KO males are viable, fertile and phenotypically indistinguishable from the wild-type littermates. Ophthalmologic examination shows hypopigmentation of the ocular fundus in mutant animals compared with wild-type. Analysis of the retinofugal pathway reveals a reduction in the size of the uncrossed pathway, demonstrating a misrouting of the optic fibres at the chiasm, as observed in OA1 patients. Microscopic examination of the RPE shows the presence of giant melanosomes comparable with those described in OA1 patients. Ultrastructural analysis of the RPE cells, suggests that the giant melanosomes may form by abnormal growth of single melanosomes, rather than the fusion of several, shedding light on the pathogenesis of ocular albinism.
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PMID:Oa1 knock-out: new insights on the pathogenesis of ocular albinism type 1. 1109 54

X-linked cone dystrophy is a type of hereditary retinal degeneration characterized by a progressive dysfunction of the day vision or photopic (cone) system with preservation of night vision or scotopic (rod) function. The disease presents with a triad of photophobia, loss of color vision and reduced central vision. This phenotype is distinct from retinitis pigmentosa (RP) in which there are prominent night and peripheral vision disturbances. X-linked cone dystrophy is a genetically heterogeneous disorder, with linkage to loci on Xp11.4--Xp21.1 (COD1, OMIM 304020) and Xq27 (COD2, OMIM 303800). COD1 maps to a region that harbors the RPGR gene, mutations in which account for >70% of patients with X-linked RP. The majority of these mutations reside in one purine-rich exon, ORF15, encoding 567 amino acids with a repetitive domain rich in glutamic acid residues. We mapped two families with X-linked cone dystrophy to the COD1 locus and identified two distinct mutations in ORF15 in the RPGR gene (ORF15+1343_1344delGG and ORF15+694_708del15) leading to a frame-shift and premature termination of translation in one case and a deletion of five amino acids in another. Consistent with expression of RPGR in rods and cones, our results show that mutations in RPGR, in addition to X-linked RP, can also cause cone-specific degeneration.
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PMID:Mutations in the RPGR gene cause X-linked cone dystrophy. 1187 55

Three siblings, two boys and one girl, presented with pigmentary abnormalities. The brothers, ages 11 and 6 years, had diffuse reticulate macular hyperpigmentation with onset in early childhood. In addition, these boys had hypohydrosis, coarse hair with an upswept frontal hairline, failure to thrive, and chronic pulmonary disease. The older boy also had corneal dystrophy and marked photophobia. A punch biopsy specimen from the 11-year-old showed melanophages and necrotic keratinocytes. Stains for amyloid were negative. The sister, age 2 years, had congenital linear hyperpigmented patches involving the intertrigenous areas, but was otherwise normal. The clinical findings of these children were consistent with X-linked reticulate pigmentary disorder with systemic manifestations. We present a summary of the clinical manifestations of this rare disorder and discuss efforts to identify the causative gene.
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PMID:X-linked reticulate pigmentary disorder with systemic manifestations: report of a third family and literature review. 1580 99

We report a boy, born to healthy first cousin parents, with diffuse hyperpigmentation of the skin and guttate hypomelanotic lesions, photophobia, abnormal hair, developmental delay, and recurrent bronchitis. Skin histology showed pigmentation incontinence with numerous melanophages. Electron microscopy showed a very high number of melanosomes and some degenerating keratinocytes. These features correspond to a rare genodermatosis, the X-linked reticulate pigmentary disorder with systemic manifestations. Skewed X-inactivation patterns were detected in the mother's lymphocytes.
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PMID:X-linked reticulate pigmentary layer. Report of a new patient and demonstration of a skewed X-inactivation. 1584 84


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