نتایج جستجو برای: lysosomal storage disease

تعداد نتایج: 1671181  

Journal: :Cell 2011
Joseph R. Mazzulli You-Hai Xu Ying Sun Adam L. Knight Pamela J. McLean Guy A. Caldwell Ellen Sidransky Gregory A. Grabowski Dimitri Krainc

Parkinson's disease (PD), an adult neurodegenerative disorder, has been clinically linked to the lysosomal storage disorder Gaucher disease (GD), but the mechanistic connection is not known. Here, we show that functional loss of GD-linked glucocerebrosidase (GCase) in primary cultures or human iPS neurons compromises lysosomal protein degradation, causes accumulation of α-synuclein (α-syn), and...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1994
R M Shull E D Kakkis M F McEntee S A Kania A J Jonas E F Neufeld

The Hurler syndrome (alpha-L-iduronidase deficiency disease) is a severe lysosomal storage disorder that is potentially amenable to enzyme-replacement therapy. Availability of a canine model of the disease and a sufficient supply of corrective enzyme have permitted a therapeutic trial lasting 3 mo. Recombinant human alpha-L-iduronidase, purified to apparent homogeneity from secretions of a stab...

Journal: :Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN 2002
Margaret Park Amanda Helip-Wooley Jess Thoene

Nephropathic cystinosis is a lethal disorder of lysosomal cystine storage due to defective lysosomal cystine transport. How lysosomal cystine causes this multisystemic disorder culminating in end-stage renal disease is not known, because the cystine is isolated from cellular metabolism by the lysosomal membrane. It is here reported that in both normal and nephropathic cystinotic fibroblasts and...

Journal: :Journal of neuromuscular diseases 2015
Carolina F M de Souza Karina Donnis Filippo Vairo Maira Burim Simone Fagondes Roberto Giugliani

Pompe disease is a rare autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disease caused by defi ciency of acid α-glucosidase (GAA). This defi ciency results in glycogen accumulation in the lysosomes, leading to lysosomal swelling, cellular damage, and organ dysfunction. In early onset patients (the classic infantile form), this glycogen accumulation leads to death, usually before the age of 1 year. Some p...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2007
Carmine Settembre Ida Annunziata Carmine Spampanato Daniela Zarcone Gilda Cobellis Edoardo Nusco Ester Zito Carlo Tacchetti Maria Pia Cosma Andrea Ballabio

Sulfatases are involved in several biological functions such as degradation of macromolecules in the lysosomes. In patients with multiple sulfatase deficiency, mutations in the SUMF1 gene cause a reduction of sulfatase activities because of a posttranslational modification defect. We have generated a mouse line carrying a null mutation in the Sumf1 gene. Sulfatase activities are completely abse...

Journal: :Molecular genetics and metabolism 2010
Christopher P Larsen Patrick D Walker Jess G Thoene

Nephropathic cystinosis results from lysosomal cystine storage and, if untreated with cysteamine, results in end-stage renal disease by 10 years of age. The renal Fanconi syndrome occurs in the first year of life and is accompanied by a characteristic "swan neck" deformity of the proximal renal tubule. The linkage between cystine storage, Fanconi syndrome, and renal failure has not been underst...

Journal: :Science 2010
Stefanie Weinert Sabrina Jabs Chayarop Supanchart Michaela Schweizer Niclas Gimber Martin Richter Jörg Rademann Tobias Stauber Uwe Kornak Thomas J Jentsch

During lysosomal acidification, proton-pump currents are thought to be shunted by a chloride ion (Cl-) channel, tentatively identified as ClC-7. Surprisingly, recent data suggest that ClC-7 instead mediates Cl-/proton (H+) exchange. We generated mice carrying a point mutation converting ClC-7 into an uncoupled (unc) Cl- conductor. Despite maintaining lysosomal conductance and normal lysosomal p...

Journal: :Journal of medical genetics 1994
M L Barth A Fensom A Harris

The lysosomal storage disorders share one common characteristic: the accumulation of a particular substrate inside the lysosome. Each disorder in this group is caused either by the deficiency of a lysosomal enzyme responsible for one step of the degradation pathway of a substrate, lack of a transporter involved in the movement of a small molecule across the lysosomal membrane, or absence of a l...

Journal: :Clinical chemistry 2011
Thomas F Metz Thomas P Mechtler Joseph J Orsini Monica Martin Bori Shushan Joseph L Herman Rene Ratschmann Chike B Item Berthold Streubel Kurt R Herkner David C Kasper

BACKGROUND Interest in lysosomal storage disorders, a collection of more than 40 inherited metabolic disorders, has increased because of new therapy options such as enzyme replacement, stem cell transplantation, and substrate reduction therapy. We developed a high-throughput protocol that simplifies analytical challenges such as complex sample preparation and potential interference from excess ...

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