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)

Fabry's disease is a recessive X-linked inborn error of metabolism due to deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme alpha-galactosidase. The large variety of symptoms may make the diagnosis difficult. A severely afflicted female patient is presented. For several years she had been treated under the diagnosis polyarteritis nodosa until the characteristic cutaneous lesions of Fabry's disease were recognized. Enzymatic studies and electronmicroscopic examinations confirmed the diagnosis. A symptomatic effect of corticosteroid treatment was proven. The grave prognosis, the recent attempts at enzyme substitution therapy and the possibility of preventing new cases by prenatal diagnosis should stimulate the efforts of the clinician to diagnose the disease.
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PMID:On the diagnosis of Fabry's disease. 5 72

Fabry's disease is an X-linked inborn error of glycosphingolipid catabolism, resulting from deficient activity of the enzyme alpha-galactosidase. The wide variety of symptoms may make it difficult to establish a diagnosis. This study was based on a Scandinavian survey of cases between 1967 and 1975. Altogether 13 cases were collected. Enzymatic studies and electromicroscopy confirmed the diagnosis in all cases. Renal transplantation has been performed in one Swedish patient and 8 years later his general health is good. Three of the patients died at about 50 years of age, which illustrates the grave prognosis of the disease. The report is concluded with a short review of the symptomatology, diagnosis and treatment of Fabry's disease. The possibility of enzyme replacement therapy and the potential value of renal transplantation are discussed. Prenatal diagnosis of Fabry's disease may also be possible.
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PMID:Fabry's disease. A brief review in connection with a Scandinavian survey. 11 14

The alpha-galactosidase/beta-hexosaminidase ratio was measured for individual hair roots as a method for heterozygote detection in Fabry's disease. Hair root analysis in control individuals revealed no striking sex difference in alpha-galactosidase/beta-hexosaminidase ratio when five males and five females were compared. The values for the ratio X 100, calculating both enzyme activities in nmol of product per min per microliter of hair extract, ranged from 0.8 to 9 for controls and from less than 0.1 to 0.4 for two hemizygous males. Hair root analysis in four heterozygotes with clinical evidence of disease gave values for each individual in the control range, in the range for hemizygotes and in an intermediate range. The experience using hair root analysis for heterozygote detection in the X-linked Lesch-Nyhan syndrome suggests that this approch will be a sensitive heterozygote detection method which takes advantage of the occurrence of hairs with a deficient phenotype on the basis of Lyonization. We observed an affected male who was born to a female without clinical or biochemical evidence (examination included extensive hair root analysis) of Fabry's disease, thus documenting a likely instance of new mutation.
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PMID:Detection of Fabry's disease heterozygotes by hair root analysis. 20 81

Sixty-eight independent hybrid clones were isolated after irradiated normal human lymphocytes were fused with Chinese hamster fibroblasts lacking hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase activity. The cells were grown under selective conditions requiring retention of the X chromosome-linked locus for human hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase. The frequency and patterns of cotransference of human phosphoribosylpyrophosphate synthetase with the selected marker and with additional X-linked enzymatic markers confirm X linkage of the structural gene for human phosphoribosylpyrophosphate synthetase and support assignment of this gene to a position on the long arm of the X, between the loci for alpha-galactosidase and hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase.
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PMID:Regional localization of the gene for human phosphoribosylpyrophosphate synthetase on the X chromosome. 21 84

A pilot trial of enzyme replacement with splenic and plasma alpha-galactosidase A (alpha-D-galactosidase; alpha-D-galactoside galactohydrolase, EC 3.2.1.22) isozymes was undertaken in two brothers with Fabry disease, an X-linked glycosphingolipid storage disease. Six unentrapped doses (2000 units/kg) of each isozyme were administered intravenously to the respective recipients during a 117-day period. The circulating half-life of the splenic isozyme was about 10 min, whereas that for the plasma isozyme was approximately 70 min. No immune response was detected by skin and immunodiffusion tests or by alterations in the maximal activity or clearance kinetics for either isozyme after successive administrations. After each dose of the splenic isozyme, the concentration of the accumulated circulating substrate, trihexosylceramide (globotriaosylceramide), decreased maximally (approximately 50% of initial values) in 15 min and returned to preinfusion levels by 2-3 hr. In marked contrast, injection of the plasma isozyme decreased the circulating substrate levels 50-70% by 2-6 hr; the concentrations gradually returned to preinfusion values by 36-72 hr.
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PMID:Enzyme therapy in Fabry disease: differential in vivo plasma clearance and metabolic effectiveness of plasma and splenic alpha-galactosidase A isozymes. 22 84

A rapid and simple method is described for the identification of the carrier state in angiokeratoma corporis diffusum. The alpha-galactosidase (alpha-D-galactoside galactohydrolase, E.C.3.2.1.22) activities in individual hair roots are measured and compared with those of N-acetyl-beta-hexosaminidase (E.C.3.2.1.30), another lysosomal enzyme that is not affected. The cellular mosaicism typical of females heterozygous for X-linked disorders is revealed by the presence of normal, affected and partially affected hair roots. Normal individuals show no affected roots, while males hemizygous for the trait have no hair roots with enzyme activities in the normal range.
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PMID:Anderson-Fabry disease: rapid detection of carriers by hair bulb analysis. 22 42

The alpha-galactosidases in normal man-Chinese hamster somatic cell hybrids were investigation with antibodies specific for human alpha-galactosidase A and antibodies specific for Chinese hamster alpha-galactosidase. It was found that an isoenzyme in hybrid cells, which has an electrophoretic mobility between that of human alpha-galactosidase A and Chinese hamster alpha-galactosidase, contains immunologic determinants of both human and Chinese hamster origin, suggesting that it is a heteropolymeric molecule. Moreover, the locus for human alpha-galactosidase, which was found to be X-linked, is the locus coding for alpha-galactosidase A. Hybrids isolated after fusion of Chinese hamster cells with cells of a patient with Fabry's disease did not express human alpha-galactosidase A or the heteropolymeric molecule even in the presence of the active human X chromosome, indicating that the deficiency of alpha-galactosidase A in Fabry's disease is probably due to a mutation in a structural gene resulting in the inability to form immunologically detectable and functionally active molecules of alpha-galactosidase A.
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PMID:Characterization of alpha-galactosidase isoenzymes in normal and Fabry human-Chinese Hamster somatic cell hybrids. 40 32

Heterozygote detection for angiokeratoma corporis diffusum (Anderson-Fabry disease, ACD), an X-linked disorder of glycosphingolipid metabolism was examined using alpha-galactosidase activity, an alpha-galactosidase/beta-galactosidase activity ratios (alpha/beta ratio) in leucocytes, plasma, and hair follicles; For leucocytes, 22 obligate heterozygotes, 25 suspected heterozygotes, and 47 control subjects were studied, while for plasma, the groups were 17 obligate heterozygotes and 35 controls. The alpha/beta ratio in plasma and leucocytes was clearly a better discriminator between obligate heterozygotes and controls than alpha-galactosidase activity alone, but still failed to detect 3 obligates with leucocytes and 2 with plasma. Discrimination was not improved by joint use of plasma and leucocyte alpha/beta ratios, but was improved by measurement of hair-follicle alpha/beta ratios. The interdecile range of log (alpha-galactosidase/beta-galactosidase activity) in 20 hair follicles from each of 4 obligate and 7 suspected heterozygotes was clearly different from 11 control subjects. Accordingly, for rapid screening for carriers of ACD, we recommend use of leucocyte or plasma alpha/beta ratios which should detect greater than 85% of heterozygotes. When results are equivocal, and ancillary information suggests heterozygous status, the more time-consuming measurement of hair-follicle alpha/beta ratios is a useful additional test.
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PMID:Heterozygote detection in angiokeratoma corporis diffusum (Anderson-Fabry disease). Studies on plasma, leucocytes, and hair follicles. 40 11

Cytogenetic studies on a mentally retarded boy revealed an X-Y translocation, karyotype 46,X,t(X;Y)(p22;q11). Only 5 other such cases have been reported and these were all females. The unequivocal male phenotype suggested non-random inactivation of the normal maternally derived X chromosome, and that the non-inactivated X-Y translocation chromosome included the locus for male determination. Confirmation of this was provided by unassociated X and Y chromatin in interphase cells, as well as by reverse banding after BrdU incorporation and autoradiography of metaphase chromosomes. There was anomalous Xg blood group inheritance in the proband, indicating possible localisation of the Xg locus to the terminal portion of the X short arm. Linkage of Xg and a form of X-linked mental retardation is suggested. Close linkage of the Xg locus with the loci for alpha-galactosidase, phosphoglycerate kinase, G-6-PD, and MPS II was excluded.
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PMID:X-Y translocation in a retarded phenotypic male. Clinical, cytogenetic, biochemical, and serogenetic studies. 74 19

Somatic cell hybridization techniques were applied to gene linkage analysis in the laboratory mouse. Cells of an established line of Chinese hamster lung fibroblasts were fused with mouse embryo fibroblasts and with mouse peritoneal macrophages obtained from different inbred strains. From 3 hybridization experiments, 123 primary and secondary clones were isolated in HAT selective medium and 24 were back-selected in 8-azaguanine. Hybrid clones were characterized for the expression of 16 murine isozymes by starch, acrylamide, and Cellogel electrophoresis, and on the basis of segregation data, 3 syntenic associations could be made. Malate oxidoreductase decarboxylating (MOD) and mannose phosphate isomerase (MPI) segregated concordantly, confirming an established linkage relationship; adenine phosphoribosyltransferase (APRT) segregated concordantly with glutathione reductase (GR) which is known to be on chromosome 8; alpha-galactosidase was observed to be syntenic with hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT), and X-linked enzyme. All other isozymes examined segregated independently of one another.
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PMID:Gene linkage analysis in the mouse by somatic cell hybridization: assignment of adenine phosphoribosyltransferase to chromosome 8 and alpha-galactosidase to the X chromosome. 123 12


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