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Query: UNIPROT:Q00604 (
X-linked
)
16,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have studied ten phenotypically similar patients with complete androgen insensitivity. All of the patients tested had significantly elevated serum luteinizing hormone and plasma androgens within or above the normal adult male range. On the basis of specific dihydrotestosterone binding by skin fibroblasts, we identified two subgroups. Six patients from five different families had undetectable dihydrotestosterone binding, while four patients from two families had normal binding activity. Our results indicate that within the clinical syndrome of androgen insensitivity there are at least two distinct genetic variants. These variants may result from allelic mutations of the same
X-linked
gene specifying the
dihydrotestosterone receptor
or, alternatively, from mutations of separate genes both being essential for androgen action in responsive cells.
...
PMID:Androgen insensitivity in man: evidence for genetic heterogeneity. 17 60
Expansion of the trinucleotide repeat (CAG)n in the first exon of the androgen receptor gene is associated with a rare motor neuron disorder,
X-linked
spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy
. We have found that expanded (CAG)n alleles undergo alteration in length when transmitted from parent to offspring. Of 45 meioses examined, 12 (27%) demonstrated a change in CAG repeat number. Both expansions and contractions were observed, although their magnitude was small. There was a greater rate of instability in male meiosis than in female meiosis. We also found evidence for a correlation between disease severity and CAG repeat length, but other factors seem to contribute to the phenotypic variability in this disorder.
...
PMID:Meiotic stability and genotype-phenotype correlation of the trinucleotide repeat in X-linked spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy. 130 83
We studied androgen receptor function in cultured scrotal skin fibroblasts from eight subjects with
X-linked
spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy
(
SBMA
) (Kennedy's syndrome) from four families. The neuromuscular and endocrine features were similar in all patients. High-affinity dihydrotestosterone binding (Bmax) was decreased in three patients from one family (average, 11.1 fmol/mg) similar to values in subjects with androgen resistance syndromes. Bmax was normal in five
SBMA
patients from three other families (average, 26.0 fmol/mg). This finding provides direct evidence for abnormal androgen receptor function in some patients with
SBMA
. There was some correlation between severity of neuromuscular and endocrine dysfunction, providing further evidence that the two types of manifestations are related.
...
PMID:X-linked spinomuscular atrophy: a kindred with associated abnormal androgen receptor binding. 143 32
X-linked
spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy
(
SBMA
), a motor neuron disease associated with androgen insensitivity, is caused by androgen receptor gene mutations with an increased number of tandem CAG repeats in exon 1. We investigated the increased number of CAG repeats in androgen receptor genes of 19
SBMA
patients and found that this correlated strongly with the age at onset of muscle weakness. Thus,
SBMA
is the first genetic disease in which a strong correlation between the degree of genetic abnormality (number of CAG tandem repeats) and clinical phenotypic expression is demonstrable. The results further indicate that androgen gene mutation is directly involved in the degeneration of motor neurons.
...
PMID:Strong correlation between the number of CAG repeats in androgen receptor genes and the clinical onset of features of spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy. 146 83
Herein we describe a family with
X-linked
spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy
(SBMA or Kennedy's disease), an adult onset neuromuscular disease characterized by slow progression, predominant proximal and bulbar muscle weakness. One frequent association is the appearance of gynecomastia. This disorder was previously shown to be linked to the locus DXYS1 on the proximal long arm of the X chromosome. Recently, a report implicated a mutation at the N-terminus of the androgen receptor gene involving amplification of CAG repeats as the cause of
X-linked
SBMA. We studied this region of the androgen receptor in a kindred clinically suspected but not confirmed of having
X-linked
SBMA by the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) followed by Southern analysis and DNA sequencing. The mutated allele was found to have an increased number of 51 CAG repeats confirming the clinical diagnosis of SBMA. Normal individuals revealed 23 repeat numbers within the normal range, while another unrelated
X-linked
SBMA patient had an enlarged CAG repeat region. The carrier or disease status could be established or confirmed in 12 individuals of this family on the basis of detecting normal and disease alleles reflected by the number of CAG repeats.
...
PMID:Analysis of the CAG repeat region of the androgen receptor gene in a kindred with X-linked spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy. 146 23
X-linked
spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy
(
SBMA
) is usually associated with feminization and hypogonadism. We were unable to find androgen receptor (AR) in the scrotal skin of three patients with
SBMA
, and propose that AR abnormality is the cause of the disease.
...
PMID:Androgen receptor abnormality in X-linked spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy. 151 60
X-linked
spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy
(
SBMA
), an adult-onset form of motor neuron disease, was recently reported to be caused by amplification of the CAG repeats in the androgen receptor gene. We report here a simple and rapid strategy to detect the precise number of the CAGs. After the DNA fragment containing the CAG repeats is amplified by the polymerase chain reaction, a primer extension is carried out; the extension of the end-labelled reverse primer adjacent to 3' end of CAG repeats stops at the first T after CAG repeats with the incorporation of dideoxy ATP in the reaction mixture. The resultant primer products are analysed by denaturing polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and autoradiography. This method could be quite useful to detect not only CAG repeats in
SBMA
but also other polymorphic dinucleotide and trinucleotide repeats.
...
PMID:A novel primer extension method to detect the number of CAG repeats in the androgen receptor gene in families with X-linked spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy. 173 65
We describe a 72-year-old male with bulbospinal muscular atrophy (BSMA) who was being treated for diabetes mellitus and congestive heart failure due to an old myocardial infarction. Although BSMA is a rare form of
X-linked
spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy
of late onset, this case is a sporadic case. We emphasize the importance of recognizing a sporadic case of BSMA.
...
PMID:A sporadic case of bulbospinal muscular atrophy of late onset. 189 14
X-linked
spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy
(Kennedy's disease) is an adult-onset form of motorneuron disease which may be associated with signs of androgen insensitivity. We have now investigated whether the androgen receptor gene on the proximal long arm of the X chromosome is a candidate gene for this disease. In patient samples we found androgen receptor gene mutations with increased size of a polymorphic tandem CAG repeat in the coding region. These amplified repeats were absolutely associated with the disease, being present in 35 unrelated patients and none of 75 controls. They segregated with the disease in 15 families, with no recombination in 61 meioses (the maximum log likelihood ratio (lod score) is 13.2 at a recombination rate of 0). The association is unlikely to be due to linkage disequilibrium, because 11 different disease alleles were observed. We conclude that enlargement of the CAG repeat in the androgen receptor gene is probably the cause of this disorder.
...
PMID:Androgen receptor gene mutations in X-linked spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy. 206 80
The complete form of androgen insensitivity is an inherited
X-linked
syndrome in which genetic males fail to undergo masculinization in utero due to defective functioning of the androgen receptor (AR). The molecular basis of androgen insensitivity was investigated in the testicular feminized (Tfm) rat with this syndrome. AR mRNA size and amount, as well as nuclear
AR protein
revealed by immunocytochemistry, suggested normal expression of the AR gene in the Tfm rat. Sequence analysis of the AR coding region from Tfm and wild-type littermate male rats revealed a single transition mutation, guanine to adenine, within exon E, changing arginine 734 to glutamine within the steroid-binding domain of the AR. This arginine is highly conserved among the family of nuclear receptors and may be part of a phosphorylation recognition site. A recreated mutant AR (Arg734----Gln) expressed in COS cells had only 10-15% of the androgen-binding capacity of wild-type AR; the reduced androgen-binding capacity was similar to that of AR in tissue extracts of the Tfm rat. Stimulation of transcriptional activity by the recreated mutant AR was reduced relative to wild-type AR in cotransfection assays in CV1 cells using as reporter plasmid the mouse mammary tumor virus promoter linked to the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase gene. Thus, arginine 734 appears essential for normal AR function both in androgen binding and transcriptional activation. Absence of these functions results in androgen insensitivity and lack of male sexual development.
...
PMID:A single base mutation in the androgen receptor gene causes androgen insensitivity in the testicular feminized rat. 234 9
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