34 research outputs found
Preliminary molecular genetic analysis of the Receptor Interacting Protein 140 (RIP140) in women affected by endometriosis
BACKGROUND: Endometriosis is a complex disease affecting 10–15% of women at reproductive age. Very few genes are known to be altered in this pathology. RIP140 protein is an important cofactor of oestrogen receptor and many other nuclear receptors. Targeting disruption experiments of nrip1 gene in mice have demonstrated that nuclear receptor interacting protein 1 gene (nrip1), the gene encoding for rip140 protein, is essential for female fertility. Specifically, mice null for nrip1 gene are viable, but females are infertile because of complete failure of mature follicles to release oocytes at ovulation stage. The ovarian phenotype observed in mice devoid of rip140 closely resembles the luteinized unruptured follicle (LUF) syndrome that is observed in a high proportion of women affected of endometriosis or idiopathic infertility. Here we present a preliminary work that analyses the role of NRIP1 gene in humans. METHODS: We have sequenced the complete coding region of NRIP1 gene in 20 unrelated patients affected by endometriosis. We have performed genetic association studies by using the DNA variants identified during the sequencing process. RESULTS: We identified six DNA variants within the coding sequence of NRIP1 gene, and five of them generated amino acid changes in the protein. We observed that three of twenty sequenced patients have specific combinations of amino-acid variants within the RIP140 protein that are poorly represented in the control population (p = 0.006). Moreover, we found that Arg448Gly, a common polymorphism located within NRIP1 gene, is associated with endometriosis in a case-control study (59 cases and 141 controls, p(allele positivity test )= 0.027). CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that NRIP1 gene variants, separately or in combinations, might act as predisposing factors for human endometriosis
Primary cardiac lymphoma presenting as atrial flutter and total heart block
Primary cardiac lymphoma is extremely rare. We present the case of a 70-year-old man with primary cardiac lymphoma involving interatrial septum, presenting as atrial flutter and total heart block. The diagnosis was obtained by echocardiography-guided transvenous endocardial biopsy which revealed diffuse large B-cell non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, CD 20+. After six courses of immunochemotherapy the patient achieved complete remission. After 2 months he developed a series of epileptic attacks. Intracerebral lymphoma extension was diagnosed. Two cycles of high-dose methotrexate and cranial irradiation were applied, resulting in a second complete remission
Increased availability of family donors for hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in a population with increased incidence of consanguinity
The study was planned to determine the frequency of parental and non-sibling family donor transplants in our center and to investigate the rate of familial donor availability at two HLA-typing laboratories in Turkey. Among 203 patients who underwent hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT), 151 (74.4%) received stem cells from siblings, 48 (23.6%) from non-sibling family donors, two (1.0%) from unrelated cord blood, and two (1.0%) autologous transplantation. Of these 48 patients received stem cells from non-sibling family donors; donors were mothers for 26 (12.8%), fathers for 20 (9.9%), and aunts for two (1.0%). The rate of transplants from parental donors was 22.6% in this patient population with increased frequency of inherited diseases (58.1%). Among these 203 patients, there was consanguinity between parents in 60.6% of the patients. Of 833 subjects applying as donor candidates to HLA-typing laboratories, 527 (63.3%) had HLA 6/6 identical family donors. Among 527 full-matched donors, 479 (90.9%) were sibling, 21 (4.0%) were fathers, and 17 (3.2%) were mothers. The remaining 10 (1.9%) were other relatives. The results have shown that the unfavorable factor of consanguinity marriage may increase the availability of family donors for HSCT in particularly developing countries where large donor registries are lacking. © 2010 John Wiley & Sons A/S