Gene defect located for Gaucher's disease.Gene defect located for Gaucher's disease Gaucher's disease (gōshāz`), rare genetic disease involving a deficiency of an enzyme, glucocerebrosidase, which normally breaks down certain body glycolipids (i.e., lipids (fats) that have a sugar molecule attached). Using recently developed methods forgenetic analysis, scientists have located a rare gene defect that often leads to a potentially fatal enzyme deficiency in infants. Shoji shoji In Japanese architecture, sliding partition doors and windows made of a latticework wooden frame and covered with a tough, translucent white paper. When closed, they softly diffuse light throughout the house. Tsuji of the National Institute of Mental Health The National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) is part of the federal government of the United States and the largest research organization in the world specializing in mental illness. (NIMH) and his colleagues tracked the mutation to a site on chromosome 1. The finding will improve genetic counselingfor victims of the the most serious forms of Gaucher's disease, which is caused by the enzyme deficiency, report the researchers in the March 5 NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE The New England Journal of Medicine (New Engl J Med or NEJM) is an English-language peer-reviewed medical journal published by the Massachusetts Medical Society. It is one of the most popular and widely-read peer-reviewed general medical journals in the world. . The enzyme in question, glucocerebrosidase,breaks down a critical fat in certain body tissues. When the undegraded fat builds up, it can cause several types of Gaucher's disease. Type 1, the most common form, is characterized by an enlarged spleen enlarged spleen Splenomegaly, see there and liver, and bone deterioration. The genetic mutation Noun 1. genetic mutation - (genetics) any event that changes genetic structure; any alteration in the inherited nucleic acid sequence of the genotype of an organism chromosomal mutation, mutation for type 1 is carried by one in 600 Jews of Eastern European ancestry. Type 2 kills infants by about 2 1/2 years of age, often because motor and respiratory control is severely hindered. In type 3, nonfatal neurological symptoms, including epilepsy, dementia and difficulty in controlling eye movements, begin during adolescence. Most of the estimated 10,000 to 20,000 people in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. with Gaucher's disease have relatively mild cases of type 1. About 2 percent have types 2 or 3. All three types are known to resultfrom mutations in the gene that codes for glucocerebrosidase. The investigators cloned the sequence of chemical subunits that determine protein production for a normal glucocerebrosidase gene and compared it with a sequence cloned from a patient with type 2 Gaucher's disease. An alteration at just one location was identified in the latter sequence. This chemical substitution leads to the synthesis of an abnormal enzyme that fails to break down the key fat in body tissues. The genetic-code change was thenchecked in a larger sample using an enzyme that slices DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. at points signaling either the presence of a normal glucocerebrosidase gene sequence or the Gaucher's disease mutation. Four of 5 patients with type 2 disease and all 11 patients with type 3 disease had the mutation on at least one of two chromosome strands, or alleles, that were isolated from blood samples. One strand is inherited from the mother, the other from the father. Two of 5 patients with type 2 disease and 7 of 11 with type 3 had the mutation on both alleles. The mutation showed up on a single allele allele (əlēl`): see genetics. allele Any one of two or more alternative forms of a gene that may occur alternatively at a given site on a chromosome. for 4 of 20 patients with type 1 disease. None of 29 healthy controls had the mutant allele. "Clearly, this mutation is not responsiblefor all cases of type 2 and 3,' says project director Edward I. Ginns of NIMH. "But we can now predict whether neurological problems are likely to occur later in life for children with symptoms of Gaucher's disease.' There may be another mutation, he contends, that will distinguish between type 2 and type 3. Work is under way on the developmentof gene therapy to treat Gaucher's disease. NIMH investigators, working with scientists at the Whitehead Institute in Boston, have transferred the normal gene into Gaucher's cells Gaucher's cells large, foamy macrophages characteristic of Gaucher's disease which accumulate in many tissues; they result from accumulated glucocerebroside due to deficiency in ß-glucocerebrosidase. with a type 2 mutation and corrected the enzyme deficiency in tissue culture. The next step, says Ginns, is to transfer the normal human gene into the bone marrow of mice to see if the critical enzyme is then produced. Undegraded fat in Gaucher's disease is stored predominantly in cells derived from bone marrow. There are indications, notes Ginns,that a "pseudogene' missing parts necessary to code glucocerebrosidase moves into the region of the functional gene and creates the mutation. |
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