2 resultados para Age At Onset

em DI-fusion - The institutional repository of Université Libre de Bruxelles


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Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) is the most common form of autosomal-recessive ataxia. Common nonmotor features include cardiomyopathy and diabetes mellitus. At present, no effective treatments are available to prevent disease progression. Age of onset varies from infancy to adulthood. In the majority of patients, FRDA is caused by intronic GAA expansions in FXN, which encodes a highly-conserved small mitochondrial matrix protein, frataxin. A mouse model of FRDA has been difficult to generate because complete loss of frataxin causes early embryonic lethality. Although there are some controversies about the function of frataxin, recent biochemical and structural studies have confirmed that it is a component of the multiprotein complex that assembles iron-sulfur clusters in the mitochondrial matrix. The main consequences of frataxin deficiency are energy deficit, altered iron metabolism, and oxidative damage.

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Friedreich ataxia (FRDA) is an autosomal recessive disease characterized by progressive neurological and cardiac abnormalities. It has a prevalence of around 2×105 in whites, accounting for more than one-third of the cases of recessively inherited ataxia in this ethnic group. FRDA may not exist in nonwhite populations.The first symptoms usually appear in childhood, but age of onset may vary from infancy to adulthood. Atrophy of sensory and cerebellar pathways causes ataxia, dysarthria, fixation instability, deep sensory loss, and loss of tendon reflexes. Corticospinal degeneration leads to muscular weakness and extensor plantar responses. A hypertrophic cardiomyopathy may contribute to disability and cause premature death. Other common problems include kyphoscoliosis, pes cavus, and, in 10% of patients, diabetes mellitus.The FRDA gene (FXN) encodes a small mitochondrial protein, frataxin, which is produced in insufficient amounts in the disease, as a consequence of the epigenetic silencing of the gene triggered by a GAA triplet repeat expansion in the first intron of the gene. Frataxin deficiency results in impaired iron-sulfur cluster biogenesis in mitochondria, in turn leading to widespread dysfunction of iron-sulfur center containing enzymes (in particular respiratory complexes I, II and III, and aconitase), impaired iron metabolism, oxidative stress, and mitochondrial dysfunction. Therapy aims to restore frataxin levels or to correct the consequences of its deficiency.