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Cystine glutathione transhydrogenase, cystine-reductase, and glutathion reductase activities were studied in cultivated skin fibroblasts of control subjects and of three patients with cystinosis. Specific activity, pH optima, electrophoretic mobility, and kinetic parameters were described. Evidence
BACKGROUND
Cystinosis is an autosomal recessive disorder, caused by mutations of the lysosomal cystine carrier cystinosin, encoded by the CTNS gene (17p13). The concomitant intralysosomal cystine accumulation leads to multi-organ damage, with kidneys being the first affected. Altered mitochondrial
Cystinosis is an inherited disorder due to mutations in the CTNS gene which encodes cystinosin, a lysosomal transmembrane protein involved in cystine export to the cytosol. Both accumulation of cystine in the lysosome and decreased cystine in the cytosol may participate in the pathogenic mechanism
Important insights have recently been derived from studies of inborn human defects of sulfur metabolism. Metabolic lesions responsible for homocystinuria have been elucidated, with possible implications for understanding atherogenesis in the general population. The cause of cystinosis remains
BACKGROUND
Nephropathic cystinosis is an autosomal recessive systemic severe disease characterized by intralysosomal cystine storage. Cysteamine is an essential component of treatment. There is solid evidence that cystine accumulation itself is not responsible for all abnormalities in cystinosis;
Cystinosis, an inherited disease caused by a defect in the lysosomal cystine transporter (CTNS), is characterized by renal proximal tubular dysfunction. Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) depletion appears to be a key event in the pathophysiology of the disease, even though the manner in which ATP
Cystinotic patients have been shown to excrete in their urine high levels of pyroglutamate, an intermediate metabolite of the adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-dependent gamma-glutamyl cycle, which is responsible for glutathione (GSH) synthesis. Human fibroblasts were used to study the mechanisms leading
Cystinosis, the most frequent cause of inborn Fanconi syndrome, is characterized by the lysosomal cystine accumulation, caused by mutations in the CTNS gene. To elucidate the pathogenesis of cystinosis, we cultured proximal tubular cells from urine of cystinotic patients (n = 9) and healthy controls
Recent evidence implies that impaired metabolism of glutathione has a role in the pathogenesis of nephropathic cystinosis. This recessive inherited disorder is characterized by lysosomal cystine accumulation and results in renal Fanconi syndrome progressing to end stage renal disease in the majority
Cultured fibroblasts from mucolipidosis II (ML-II) patients demonstrated an elevated cystine content which increased with time in culture compared to fibroblasts from cystinotic patients or normal controls under the same conditions. In both cystinotic and ML-II cells the increased levels of cystine
Fibroblasts derived from patients with cystinosis, an autosomal recessive condition, accumulate the disulfide amino acid cystine within lysosomes. The metabolic defect leading to the cystine accumulation and the source from which the cystine is derived are unknown. In this report we present data
Cystine content of skin fibroblasts derived from patients with cystinosis was decreased by inhibitors of gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase, the initial enzyme in glutathione catabolism. The addition of maleate or the gamma-glutamyl hydrazone of alpha-ketobutyric acid to culture medium (1-20 mM) resulted
BACKGROUND
Cystinosis is an autosomal recessive disease caused by intralysosomal cystine accumulation, treated with cysteamine. Recently, new adverse effects of cysteamine were reported. Skin biopsies showed microvascular proliferation (angioendotheliomatosis). To examine the mechanism of