118 research outputs found

    Serum uric acid distribution according to SLC22A12 W258X genotype in a cross-sectional study of a general Japanese population

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Although <it>SLC22A12 258X </it>allele was found among those with hypouricemia, it was unknown that serum uric acid distribution among those with <it>SLC22A12 258X </it>allele. This study examined serum uric acid (SUA) distribution according to <it>SLC22A12 </it>W258X genotype in a general Japanese population.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Subjects were 5,023 health checkup examinees (3,413 males and 1,610 females) aged 35 to 69 years with creatinine < 2.0 mg/dL, who were participants of a cohort study belonging to the Japan Multi-Institutional Collaborative Cohort Study (J-MICC Study). <it>SLC22A12 </it>W258X was genotyped with a polymerase chain reaction with confronting two-pair primers.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The genotype frequency was 4,793 for <it>WW</it>, 225 for <it>WX</it>, and 5 for <it>XX</it>, which was in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (p = 0.164) with <it>X </it>allele 0.023 (95% confidence interval [0.021-0.027]). Mean (range) SUA was 6.2 (2.1-11.4) mg/dL for <it>WW</it>, 3.9 (0.8-7.8) mg/dL for <it>WX</it>, and 0.8 (0.7-0.9) mg/dL for <it>XX </it>among males, and 4.5 (1.9-8.9) mg/dL, 3.3 (2.0-6.5) mg/dL, and 0.60 (0.5-0.7) mg/dL among females, respectively. Six individuals with SUA less than 1.0 mg/dL included two males with <it>XX </it>genotype, one male with <it>WX </it>genotype, and three females with <it>XX </it>genotype. Subjects with <it>WX </it>genotype were 14 (77.8%) of 18 males with a SUA of 1.0-2.9 mg/dL, and 28 (34.6%) of 81 females with the same range of SUA. The corresponding values were 131 (25.1%) of 522 males and 37 (3.5%) of 1,073 females for SUA 3.0-4.9 mg/dL, and 8 (0.4%) of 2,069 males and 5 (1.1%) of 429 females for SUA 5.0-6.9 mg/dL. The <it>X </it>allele effect for SUA less than 3 mg/dL was significantly (p < 0.001) higher in males (OR = 102.5, [33.9-309.8]) than in females (OR = 25.6 [14.4-45.3]).</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Although <it>SLC22A12 </it>W258X was a determining genetic factor on SUA, SUA of those with <it>WX </it>genotype distributed widely from 0.8 mg/dL to 7.8 mg/dL. It indicated that other genetic traits and/or lifestyle affected SUA of those with <it>WX </it>genotype, as well as those with <it>WW </it>genotype.</p

    Clinical and Functional Characterization of URAT1 Variants

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    Idiopathic renal hypouricaemia is an inherited form of hypouricaemia, associated with abnormal renal handling of uric acid. There is excessive urinary wasting of uric acid resulting in hypouricaemia. Patients may be asymptomatic, but the persistent urinary abnormalities may manifest as renal stone disease, and hypouricaemia may manifest as exercise induced acute kidney injury. Here we have identified Macedonian and British patients with hypouricaemia, who presented with a variety of renal symptoms and signs including renal stone disease, hematuria, pyelonephritis and nephrocalcinosis. We have identified heterozygous missense mutations in SLC22A12 encoding the urate transporter protein URAT1 and correlate these genetic findings with functional characterization. Urate handling was determined using uptake experiments in HEK293 cells. This data highlights the importance of the URAT1 renal urate transporter in determining serum urate concentrations and the clinical phenotypes, including nephrolithiasis, that should prompt the clinician to suspect an inherited form of renal hypouricaemia

    Does oculomotor inhibition of return influence fixation probability during scene search?

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    Oculomotor inhibition of return (IOR) is believed to facilitate scene scanning by decreasing the probability that gaze will return to a previously fixated location. This “foraging” hypothesis was tested during scene search and in response to sudden-onset probes at the immediately previous (one-back) fixation location. The latencies of saccades landing within 1º of the previous fixation location were elevated, consistent with oculomotor IOR. However, there was no decrease in the likelihood that the previous location would be fixated relative to distance-matched controls or an a priori baseline. Saccades exhibit an overall forward bias, but this is due to a general bias to move in the same direction and for the same distance as the last saccade (saccadic momentum) rather than to a spatially specific tendency to avoid previously fixated locations. We find no evidence that oculomotor IOR has a significant impact on return probability during scene search

    The epitaxy of gold

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