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  • 1
    ISSN: 1471-4159
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract: Some cases of autosomal-dominant familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS) have been associated with mutations in SOD1, the gene that encodes Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (Cu/Zn SOD). We determined the concentrations (µg of Cu/Zn SOD/mg of total protein), specific activities (U/µg of total protein), and apparent turnover numbers (U/µmol of Cu/Zn SOD) of Cu/Zn SOD in erythrocyte lysates from patients with known SOD1 mutations. We also measured the concentrations and activities of Cu/Zn SOD in FALS patients with no identifiable SOD1 mutations, sporadic ALS (SALS) patients, and patients with other neurologic disorders. The concentration and specific activity of Cu/Zn SOD were decreased in all patients with SOD1 mutations, with mean reductions of 51 and 46%, respectively, relative to controls. In contrast, the apparent turnover number of the enzyme was not altered in these patients. For the six mutations studied, there was no correlation between enzyme concentration or specific activity and disease severity, expressed as either duration of disease or age of onset. No significant alterations in the concentration, specific activity, or apparent turnover number of Cu/Zn SOD were detected in the FALS patients with no identifiable SOD1 mutations, SALS patients, or patients with other neurologic disorders. That Cu/Zn SOD concentration and specific activity are equivalently reduced in erythrocytes from patients with SOD1 mutations suggests that mutant Cu/Zn SOD is unstable in these cells. That concentration and specific activity do not correlate with disease severity suggests that an altered, novel function of the enzyme, rather than reduction of its dismutase activity, may be responsible for the pathogenesis of FALS.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1364-6753
    Keywords: Key words Miyoshi myopathy ; Genetic fine mapping ; Candidate genes
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: ABSTRACT Miyoshi myopathy (MM) is an early adult-onset, autosomal recessive disorder characterized by weakness and muscular atrophy starting in the distal muscles. The disease locus has been previously mapped by linkage analysis to chromsome 2p using the microsatellite marker D2S291. Initial haplotype analysis of markers in families from three different origins (North American, Japanese, and Tunisian) suggested that the MM gene is located in a 4-cM region flanked by markers D2S292 on the telomeric side and D2S286 on the centromeric side. To delineate critical recombination events revealing a more refined localization of the MM gene, we have determined the pattern of segregation of 12 marker loci in two consanguineous families of Tunisian origin. In this study we have: (1) detected recombination events with the disease locus in one family, placing the MM gene most likely between markers D2S443 (CHLC.GGAA4D07.1876) and D2S2109; (2) generated a yeast artificial chromosome contig that spans approximately 3.8 megabases and extends from marker D2S358 to marker D2S286; (3) physically mapped 21 polymorphic markers, 5 genes, 3 STSs, and 1 EST within this contig; (4) detected and mapped a new polymorphism within this interval, allowing us to further reduce the MM locus to a 360-kilobase segment; (5) mapped the gene for the cytoskeletal protein β-adducin within the MM candidate region, failing to find a consistent pattern of mutation of this gene in our MM patients; (6) excluded seven other candidate myopathy genes from the Miyoshi locus.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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