نتایج جستجو برای: smn2 protein

تعداد نتایج: 1234838  

2016
Renske I. Wadman Marloes Stam Marc D. Jansen Yana van der Weegen Camiel A. Wijngaarde Oliver Harschnitz Peter Sodaar Kees P. J. Braun Dennis Dooijes Henny H. Lemmink Leonard H. van den Berg W. Ludo van der Pol

BACKGROUND Clinical trials to test safety and efficacy of drugs for patients with spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) are currently underway. Biomarkers that document treatment-induced effects are needed because disease progression in childhood forms of SMA is slow and clinical outcome measures may lack sensitivity to detect meaningful changes in motor function in the period of 1-2 years of follow-up...

2014
Claribel D. Wee Mallory A. Havens Francine M. Jodelka Michelle L. Hastings

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is one of the most common inherited causes of pediatric mortality. SMA is caused by deletions or mutations in the survival of motor neuron 1 (SMN1) gene, which results in SMN protein deficiency. Humans have a centromeric copy of the survival of motor neuron gene, SMN2, which is nearly identical to SMN1. However, SMN2 cannot compensate for the loss of SMN1 because S...

Journal: :Chemistry & biology 2004
Mitchell R Lunn David E Root Allison M Martino Stephen P Flaherty Brian P Kelley Daniel D Coovert Arthur H Burghes Nguyen Thi Man Glenn E Morris Jianhua Zhou Elliot J Androphy Charlotte J Sumner Brent R Stockwell

Most patients with the pediatric neurodegenerative disease spinal muscular atrophy have a homozygous deletion of the survival motor neuron 1 (SMN1) gene, but retain one or more copies of the closely related SMN2 gene. The SMN2 gene encodes the same protein (SMN) but produces it at a low efficiency compared with the SMN1 gene. We performed a high-throughput screen of approximately 47,000 compoun...

Journal: :Human molecular genetics 2010
Jordan T Gladman Thomas W Bebee Chris Edwards Xueyong Wang Zarife Sahenk Mark M Rich Dawn S Chandler

Proximal spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a neurodegenerative disease caused by low levels of the survival motor neuron (SMN) protein. In humans, SMN1 and SMN2 encode the SMN protein. In SMA patients, the SMN1 gene is lost and the remaining SMN2 gene only partially compensates. Mediated by a C>T nucleotide transition in SMN2, the inefficient recognition of exon 7 by the splicing machinery resul...

Journal: :Human molecular genetics 2013
Melissa S Cobb Ferril F Rose Hansjörg Rindt Jacqueline J Glascock Monir Shababi Madeline R Miller Erkan Y Osman Pei-Fen Yen Michael L Garcia Brittanie R Martin Mary J Wetz Chiara Mazzasette Zhihua Feng Chien-Ping Ko Christian L Lorson

Spinal Muscular Atrophy (SMA) is due to the loss of the survival motor neuron gene 1 (SMN1), resulting in motor neuron (MN) degeneration, muscle atrophy and loss of motor function. While SMN2 encodes a protein identical to SMN1, a single nucleotide difference in exon 7 causes most of the SMN2-derived transcripts to be alternatively spliced resulting in a truncated and unstable protein (SMNΔ7). ...

2010
Francine M. Jodelka Allison D. Ebert Dominik M. Duelli Michelle L. Hastings

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a neurological disorder characterized by motor neuron degeneration and progressive muscle paralysis. The disease is caused by a reduction in survival of motor neuron (SMN) protein resulting from homozygous deletion of the SMN1 gene. SMN protein is also encoded by SMN2. However, splicing of SMN2 exon 7 is defective, and consequently, the majority of the transcrip...

2015
Yu-Chia Chen Jan-Gowth Chang Yuh-Jyh Jong Ting-Yuan Liu Chung-Yee Yuo

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is an inherited neuromuscular disease caused by deletion or mutation of SMN1 gene. All SMA patients carry a nearly identical SMN2 gene, which produces low level of SMN protein due to mRNA exon 7 exclusion. Previously, we found that the testis of SMA mice (smn-/- SMN2) expresses high level of SMN2 full-length mRNA, indicating a testis-specific mechanism for SMN2 exo...

Journal: :Journal of child neurology 2007
Christopher R Heier Rocky G Gogliotti Christine J DiDonato

Proximal spinal muscular atrophy is caused by deletion or mutation of the survival motor neuron 1 gene, SMN1. Rentention of a nearly identical copy gene, SMN2, enables survival but is unable to fully compensate for the loss of SMN1. The SMN1 and SMN2 genes differ by a single nucleotide that results in alternative splicing of SMN2 exon 7 due to the disruption of a binding site for an essential s...

2013
Jonathan J Cherry Erkan Y Osman Matthew C Evans Sungwoon Choi Xuechao Xing Gregory D Cuny Marcie A Glicksman Christian L Lorson Elliot J Androphy

Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a neurodegenerative disease that causes progressive muscle weakness, which primarily targets proximal muscles. About 95% of SMA cases are caused by the loss of both copies of the SMN1 gene. SMN2 is a nearly identical copy of SMN1, which expresses much less functional SMN protein. SMN2 is unable to fully compensate for the loss of SMN1 in motor neurons but does p...

2015
Vicki L. McGovern Aurélie Massoni-Laporte Xueyong Wang Thanh T. Le Hao T. Le Christine E. Beattie Mark M. Rich Arthur H. M. Burghes Udai Pandey

Spinal muscular atrophy is caused by loss of the SMN1 gene and retention of SMN2. The SMN2 copy number inversely correlates with phenotypic severity and is a modifier of disease outcome. The SMN2 gene essentially differs from SMN1 by a single nucleotide in exon 7 that modulates the incorporation of exon 7 into the final SMN transcript. The majority of the SMN2 transcripts lack exon 7 and this l...

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