464 research outputs found

    Spinocerebellar Ataxia Type 6.

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    Leukocyte telomere shortening in Huntington's disease

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    Huntington's disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disease caused by an expanded CAG repeat. Though symptom onset commonly occurs at midlife and inversely correlates with the CAG repeat expansion, age at clinical onset and progression rate are variable. In the present study we investigated the relationship between leukocyte telomere length (LTL) and HD development. LTL was measured by real-time PCR in manifest HD patients (HD, n = 62), pre-manifest HD patients (pre-HD, n = 38), and age-matched controls (n = 76). Significant LTL differences were observed between the three groups (p < .0001), with LTL values in the order: HD < pre-HD < controls. The relationship between LTL and age was different in the three groups. An inverse relationship between mean LTL and CAG repeat number was found in the pre-HD (p = .03). The overall data seem to indicate that after age 30 years, LT begins to shorten markedly in pre-HD patients according to CAG number and increasing age, up to the values observed in HD. This very suggestive picture allowed us to hypothesize that in pre-manifest HD, LTL could be a measure of time to clinical HD onset. The possible use of LTL as a reliable biomarker to track HD development and progression was evaluated and discussed

    Episodic ataxias: Faux or real?

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    The term Episodic Ataxias (EA) was originally used for a few autosomal dominant diseases, characterized by attacks of cerebellar dysfunction of variable duration and frequency, often accompanied by other ictal and interictal signs. The original group subsequently grew to include other very rare EAs, frequently reported in single families, for some of which no responsible gene was found. The clinical spectrum of these diseases has been enormously amplified over time. In addition, episodes of ataxia have been described as phenotypic variants in the context of several different disorders. The whole group is somewhat confused, since a strong evidence linking the mutation to a given phenotype has not always been established. In this review we will collect and examine all instances of ataxia episodes reported so far, emphasizing those for which the pathophysiology and the clinical spectrum is best defined

    Regulation of the expression of the Kluyveromyces lactis PDC1 gene: carbon source-responsive elements and autoregulation

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    The yeast Kluyveromyces lactis has a single structural gene coding for pyruvate decarboxylase (KIPDC1). In order to study the regulation of the expression of KIPDC1, we have sequenced (EMBL Accession No. Y15435) its promoter and have fused the promoter to the reporter gene lacZ from E. coli. Transcription analysis in a Klpdc1 delta strain showed that KIPDC1 expression is subject to autoregulation. The PDC1 gene from Saccharomyces cerevisiae was able to complement the Rag- phenotype of the Klpdc1 delta mutant strain and it could also repress transcription of the KIPDC1-lacZ fusion on glucose. A deletion analysis of the promoter region was performed to study carbon source-dependent regulation and revealed that at least two cis-acting regions are necessary for full induction of gene expression on glucose. Other cis-elements mediate repression on ethanol

    The 'petite negative' yeast Kluyveromyces lactis has a single gene expressing pyruvate decarboxylase activity

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    We cloned and sequenced the pyruvate decarboxylase (PDC; EC 4.1.1.1) structural gene KlPDCA in the yeast Kluyveromyces lactis and found it to be allelic to the previously isolated rag6 mutation. The putative amino acid sequence of the KlPdcAp appeared to be highly homologous to those of the yeast Pdc proteins identified so far. The disruption of KIPDCA indicated that it is the only PDC structural gene in K. lactis, as evidenced by the lack of PDC activity and ethanol production in the pdcAdelta strains and by the absence of growth on glucose in the presence of respiratory inhibitors. It was observed that expression of the KlPDCA gene is induced by glucose at the transcriptional level. Transcription of the gene was reduced in the ragl, rag2, rag5 and rag8 mutants, which are defective for the low-affinity glucose permease, phosphoglucose isomerase, hexokinase, and a positive regulator of RAG1 expression, respectively

    Dramatically different levels of cacna1a gene expression between pre-weaning wild type and leaner mice

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    Loss of function mutations of the CACNA1A gene, coding for the α1A subunit of P/Q type voltage-gated calcium channel (Ca(V)2.1), are responsible for Episodic Ataxia type 2 (EA2), an autosomal dominant disorder. A dominant negative effect of the EA2 mutated protein, rather than a haploinsufficiency mechanism, has been hypothesised both for protein-truncating and missense mutations. We analysed the cacna1a mRNA expression in leaner mice carrying a cacna1a mutation leading to a premature stop codon. The results showed a very low mutant mRNA expression compared to the wild type allele. Although the mutant mRNA slightly increases with age, its low level is likely due to degradation by nonsense mediated decay, a quality control mechanism that selectively degrades mRNA harbouring premature stop codons. These data have implications for EA2 in humans, suggesting a haploinsufficiency mechanism at least for some of the CACNA1A mutations leading to a premature stop codon

    Localization and genomic structure of human deoxyhypusine synthase gene on chromosome 19p13.2-distal 19p13.1

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    The amino acid hypusine is formed post-translationally in a single cellular protein, the eukaryotic translation initiation factor 5A, by two enzymes, namely deoxyhypusine synthase and deoxyhypusine hydroxylase. Hypusine is found in all eukaryotes and in some archaebacteria, but not in eubacteria. The deoxyhypusine synthase cDNA was cloned and mapped by fluorescence in situ hybridization on chromosome 19p13.11-p13.12. Rare cDNAs containing internal deletions were also found. We localized the deoxyhypusine synthase gene on a high resolution cosmid/BAC contig map of chromosome 19 to a region in 19p13.2-distal 19p13.1 between MANB and JUNB. Analysis of the genomic exon/intron structure of the gene coding region showed that it consists of nine exons and spans a length of 6.6kb. From observation of the genomic structure, it seems likely that the internally deleted forms of mature RNA are the result of alternative splicing, rather than of artifacts

    Leukocyte telomere length as potential biomarker of HD progression: A follow-up study

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    The identification of biomarkers for neurodegenerative disorders such as Huntington's disease (HD) is crucial for monitoring disease progression and therapeutic trial outcomes, especially in the pre-manifest disease stage (pre-HD). In a previous study, we observed that leukocyte telomere length (LTL) was strongly correlated with the estimated time to clinical onset in pre-HD subjects. To validate this hypothesis, we designed a follow-up study in which we analyzed LTL in 45 pre-HD stage subjects at baseline (T0) and then again after clinical onset at follow-up (T1); the follow-up interval was about 3 years, and the CAG range was 39-51 repeats; 90 peripheral blood mononuclear cell samples (PBMCs) were obtained from the Enroll-HD biorepository. In pre-HD subjects at T0, LTL was significantly reduced by 22% compared to the controls and by 14% from T0 at T1. No relationship was observed between the LTL and CAG numbers in subjects carrying different CAG repeats at T0 and at T1, suggesting that LTL reduction occurs independently of CAG number in pre-HD subjects. ROC curve analysis was used to test the validity of LTL as a potential biomarker of HD progression and showed that LTL measurement is extremely accurate in discriminating pre-HD subjects from the controls and even pre-HD from manifest HD, thus yielding a robust prognostic value in pre-HD subjects

    Dissection of the Carboxyl-Terminal Domain of the Proteasomal Subunit Rpn11 in Maintenance of Mitochondrial Structure and Function

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    We have previously demonstrated that the C-terminal part of Rpn11, a deubiquitinating enzyme in the lid of the proteasome, is essential for maintaining a correct cell cycle and normal mitochondrial morphology and function. The two roles are apparently unlinked as the mitochondrial role is mapped to the Carboxy-terminus, whereas the catalytic deubiquitinating activity is found within the N-terminal region. The mitochondrial defects are observed in rpn11-m1 (originally termed mpr1-1), a mutation that generates Rpn11 lacking the last 31 amino acids. No mitochondrial phenotypes are recorded for mutations in the MPN/JAMM motif. In the present study, we investigated the participation of the last 31 amino acids of the Rpn11 protein by analysis of intragenic revertants and site-specific mutants. We identified a putative -helix necessary for the maintenance of a correct cell cycle and determined that a very short region at the C-terminus of Rpn11 is essential for the maintenance of tubular mitochondrial morphology. Furthermore, we show that expression of the C-terminal part of Rpn11 is able to complement in trans all of the rpn11-m1 mitochondrial phenotypes. Finally, we investigate the mechanisms by which Rpn11 controls the mitochondrial shape and show that Rpn11 may regulate the mitochondrial fission and tubulation processes

    A fine physical map of the CACNA1A gene region on 19p13.1-p13.2 chromosome

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    The P/Q-type Ca(2+) channel alpha(1A) subunit gene (CACNA1A) was cloned on the short arm of chromosome 19 between the markers D19S221 and D19S179 and found to be responsible for Episodic Ataxia type 2, Familial Hemiplegic Migraine and Spinocerebellar Ataxia type 6. This region was physically mapped by 11 cosmid contigs spanning about 1. 4Mb, corresponding to less than 70% of the whole region. The cosmid contig used to characterize the CACNA1A gene accounted only for the coding region of the gene lacking, therefore, the promoter and possible regulation regions. The present study improves the physical map around and within the CACNA1A by giving a complete cosmid or BAC contig coverage of the D19S221-D19S179 interval. A number of new STSs, whether polymorphic or not, were characterized and physically mapped within this region. Four ESTs were also assigned to cosmids belonging to specific contigs
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