نتایج جستجو برای: dyt1 dystonia

تعداد نتایج: 6648  

Journal: :Human molecular genetics 1998
C Klein M F Brin D de Leon S A Limborska I A Ivanova-Smolenskaya S B Bressman A Friedman E D Markova N J Risch X O Breakefield L J Ozelius

The DYT1 gene recently has been cloned and shown to contain a three nucleotide (GAG) deletion responsible for most cases of autosomal dominant early-onset torsion dystonia. This deletion results in the loss of one of a pair of glutamic acids in a conserved region of a novel ATP-binding protein (torsinA). Previous haplotype analysis revealed that this same deletion had arisen at least two differ...

Journal: :Brain : a journal of neurology 1999
A S Lebre A Durr P Jedynak G Ponsot M Vidailhet Y Agid A Brice

A GAG deletion at position 946 in DYT1, one of the genes responsible for autosomal dominant idiopathic torsion dystonia (ITD), has recently been identified. We tested 24 families and six isolated cases with ITD and found 14 individuals from six French families who carried this mutation, indicating that 20% of the affected families carried the DYT1 mutation. Age at onset was always before 20 yea...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2005
Pedro Gonzalez-Alegre Nicole Bode Beverly L Davidson Henry L Paulson

DYT1 is the most common inherited dystonia. Currently, there are no preventive or curative therapies for this dominantly inherited disease. DYT1 dystonia is caused by a common three-nucleotide deletion in the TOR1A gene that eliminates a glutamic acid residue from the protein torsinA. Recent studies suggest that torsinA carrying the disease-linked mutation, torsinA(DeltaE) acts through a domina...

Journal: :The Journal of biological chemistry 2000
K Kustedjo M H Bracey B F Cravatt

Early-onset torsion dystonia is an autosomal dominant hyperkinetic movement disorder that has recently been linked to a 3-base pair deletion in the DYT1 gene. The DYT1 gene encodes a 332-amino acid protein, torsin A, that bears low but significant homology to the Hsp100/Clp family of ATPase chaperones. The deletion in DYT1 associated with torsion dystonia results in the loss of one of a pair of...

2015
Noriko Wakabayashi-Ito Rami R. Ajjuri Benjamin W. Henderson Olugbenga M. Doherty Xandra O. Breakefield Janis M. O'Donnell Naoto Ito

Dystonia represents the third most common movement disorder in humans with over 20 genetic loci identified. TOR1A (DYT1), the gene responsible for the most common primary hereditary dystonia, encodes torsinA, an AAA ATPase family protein. Most cases of DYT1 dystonia are caused by a 3 bp (ΔGAG) deletion that results in the loss of a glutamic acid residue (ΔE302/303) in the carboxyl terminal regi...

Journal: :Human molecular genetics 2008
Jeffrey W Hewett Flávia C Nery Brian Niland Pei Ge Pamela Tan Philipp Hadwiger Bakhos A Tannous Dinah W Y Sah Xandra O Breakefield

Most cases of the dominantly inherited movement disorder, early onset torsion dystonia (DYT1) are caused by a mutant form of torsinA lacking a glutamic acid residue in the C-terminal region (torsinADeltaE). TorsinA is an AAA+ protein located predominantly in the lumen of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and nuclear envelope apparently involved in membrane structure/movement and processing of prot...

Journal: :Brain : a journal of neurology 2009
Giuseppina Martella Annalisa Tassone Giuseppe Sciamanna Paola Platania Dario Cuomo Maria Teresa Viscomi Paola Bonsi Emanuele Cacci Stefano Biagioni Alessandro Usiello Giorgio Bernardi Nutan Sharma David G Standaert Antonio Pisani

DYT1 dystonia is a severe form of inherited dystonia, characterized by involuntary twisting movements and abnormal postures. It is linked to a deletion in the dyt1 gene, resulting in a mutated form of the protein torsinA. The penetrance for dystonia is incomplete, but both clinically affected and non-manifesting carriers of the DYT1 mutation exhibit impaired motor learning and evidence of alter...

2015
Wataru Sako Koji Fujita An Vo Janet C. Rucker John-Ross Rizzo Martin Niethammer Maren Carbon Susan B. Bressman Aziz M. Uluğ David Eidelberg

Although primary dystonia is defined by its characteristic motor manifestations, non-motor signs and symptoms have increasingly been recognized in this disorder. Recent neuroimaging studies have related the motor features of primary dystonia to connectivity changes in cerebello-thalamo-cortical pathways. It is not known, however, whether the non-motor manifestations of the disorder are associat...

نمودار تعداد نتایج جستجو در هر سال

با کلیک روی نمودار نتایج را به سال انتشار فیلتر کنید