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Neurovisceral and skeletal GM1-gangliosidosis in dogs with beta-galactosidase deficiency [Case Report]
Alroy, J; Orgad, U; Ucci, A A; Schelling, S H; Schunk, K L; Warren, C D; Raghavan, S S; Kolodny, E H
Beta-galactosidase-deficient siblings in two litters of English springer spaniel puppies showed a progressive neurological impairment, dwarfism, orbital hypertelorism, and dysostosis multiplex. An excess of GM1-ganglioside was found in the brain. Three abnormal oligosaccharides were present in samples of urine, brain, liver, and cartilage. Light microscopy of selected tissue specimens revealed cytoplasmic vacuoles in neurons, circulating blood cells, macrophages, and chondrocytes. Ultrastructural studies demonstrated that these membrane-bound vacuoles were of two types--one containing lamellated membranes and the other, finely granular material. These clinical and pathological findings are similar to those observed in human patients affected by the infantile form of GM1-gangliosidosis
PMID: 3925555
ISSN: 0036-8075
CID: 75062
Peroxisomes in fibroblasts from skin of Refsum's disease patients
Beard, M E; Sapirstein, V; Kolodny, E H; Holtzman, E
Skin fibroblasts were cultured from young adult patients with Refsum's disease, an inherited metabolic disorder characterized by a deficiency in oxidation of phytanic acid and by increased serum and tissue concentrations of this fatty acid. These cultures were compared to cultures of normal fibroblasts in terms of the number and distribution of peroxisomes demonstrable cytochemically in preparations incubated for catalase activity. Refsum's fibroblasts were found to contain 1-10 peroxisome profiles per 100 micron 2 of cytoplasm; the controls contained 1-2 profiles per 100 micron 2. The peroxisomes in normal fibroblasts were found in all regions of the cytoplasm. In the Refsum's material they were relatively scarce in the perinuclear region, where many of the cells showed numerous large inclusions containing lipid-like material and myelin figures. Our findings indicate that in the adult form of Refsum's disease, which is the more thoroughly studied variety, peroxisomes in fibroblasts are not diminished in number. This contrasts with a recent report concerning a case of what is thought to be an infantile form of the disorder, in which no peroxisomes were detected in a liver biopsy. If phytanic acid accumulations in the adult form are a consequence of peroxisomal defects, the defects presumably are at the level of specific enzymatic deficiencies and do not involve a generalized absence of peroxisomes
PMID: 2580885
ISSN: 0022-1554
CID: 75063
GM2-ganglioside metabolism in cultured human skin fibroblasts: unambiguous diagnosis of GM2-gangliosidosis
Raghavan, S; Krusell, A; Lyerla, T A; Bremer, E G; Kolodny, E H
The metabolism of GM2-ganglioside was studied in situ using cultured skin fibroblasts from normal individuals and patients with different forms of GM2-gangliosidosis. [3H]Sphingosine-labeled GM2 was provided in the culture medium to confluent cells in 6-cm petri dishes. After 10 days, the cells were washed free of radioactivity and harvested by trypsinization. The cellular lipids were extracted and analyzed for radioactivity in GM2 and its metabolic products. In fibroblasts from healthy subjects, 50-60% of the total cellular radioactivity was found in the neutral glycosphingolipids, ceramide, sphingomyelin and fatty acids. Degradation of the labeled GM2 progressed rapidly via GM3, ceramide dihexoside and ceramide monohexoside with a build-up of radioactivity mainly in the ceramide pool of the cell. The labeled ceramide is also reutilized for the synthesis of ceramide trihexoside, globoside and sphingomyelin or is converted to fatty acid and incorporated in ester linkages. In contrast, cells from patients with GM2-gangliosidosis representing Tay-Sachs, Sandhoff and AB variant forms of the disease did not metabolize the ingested labeled GM2-like controls. Nearly all of the radioactivity was present in the ganglioside fraction in the lipid extracts from these cells and consisted of unhydrolyzed GM2. High-performance liquid chromatographic analysis of monosialogangliosides from cells grown without added labeled GM2 in the medium indicated accumulation of endogenously synthesized GM2 in cell lines from all patients with GM2 gangliosidosis compared to healthy controls. This approach provides a reliable tool for pre- and post-natal diagnosis of all forms of GM2-gangliosidosis without ambiguity
PMID: 3995063
ISSN: 0006-3002
CID: 75064
Laboratory approaches for inherited neurometabolic diseases
Kolodny, E H; Yatziv, S
PMID: 3996782
ISSN: 0012-1622
CID: 75065
Ocular abnormalities in mucolipidosis IV [Case Report]
Riedel, K G; Zwaan, J; Kenyon, K R; Kolodny, E H; Hanninen, L; Albert, D M
Systemic findings in a 23-year-old white man with mucolipidosis type IV included early delayed psychomotor development, mental retardation, and mild facial dysplasia. There was urinary excretion of chondroitin sulfate. Ophthalmologic examination showed corneal haze, pigmentary retinopathy, and severe optic atrophy. Light microscopy showed massively engorged superficial and intermediate epithelial cells of both the cornea and the conjunctiva. By transmission electron microscopy these contained fine granular material consistent with acid mucopolysaccharide and concentric lamellar bodies presumably representing phospholipids. This storage phenomenon was also found in macrophages, plasma cells, ciliary epithelial cells, Schwann cells, retinal ganglion cells, and vascular endothelial cells. Light microscopy also disclosed early cataract formation, marked outer retinal degeneration, and optic atrophy
PMID: 3918453
ISSN: 0002-9394
CID: 75066
HYDROPS FETALIS IN GAUCHERS-DISEASE [Meeting Abstract]
RICE, GE; MOSTOUFIZADEH, M; KOLODNY, EH; DRISCOLL, SG
ISI:A1984ST46400131
ISSN: 0040-3709
CID: 74971
THE EUNICE-KENNEDY-SHRIVER-CENTER [Editorial]
KOLODNY, EH
ISI:A1984SK29300025
ISSN: 0002-9351
CID: 74972
A 47-YEAR-OLD MAN WITH CORONARY-ARTERY DISEASE AND VARIABLE NEUROLOGIC ABNORMALITIES - FABRYS-DISEASE (ALPHA-GALACTOSIDASE-A DEFICIENCY), WITH INVOLVEMENT OF NERVOUS-SYSTEM AND BLOOD-VESSELS, WITH CEREBRAL, MYOCARDIAL, AND RENAL INFARCTS [Discussion]
DAWSON, DM; MILLER, DC; ADAMS, RD; MARK, EJ; KUTER, DJ; KOLODNY, EH; HALPERIN, JJ
ISI:A1984RX92400008
ISSN: 0028-4793
CID: 74973
Diagnosis of pseudo-arylsulfatase A deficiency with electrophoretic techniques
Chang, P L; Rosa, N E; Varey, P A; Kihara, H; Kolodny, E H; Davidson, R G
Deficient arylsulfatase A activity in man has long been associated with the neurodegenerative disease, metachromatic leukodystrophy. However, similar deficiency has been noted in clinically normal individuals, and is referred to as the pseudoarylsulfatase A deficiency condition. Although direct quantitative analysis of arylsulfatase A activity failed to differentiate between these two conditions, analysis of residual arylsulfatase A activity with either Cellogel electrophoresis or isoelectric focusing in polyacrylamide gels now has been shown to distinguish between them unequivocally. With both techniques, cultured fibroblasts from patients with pseudo-arylsulfatase A deficiency showed faint but clear bands of arylsulfatase A activity. Under identical conditions, fibroblasts from patients with metachromatic leukodystrophy showed no trace of activity. These methods can be adapted easily for general laboratory analysis in cases when results from quantitative arylsulfatase A assays are noninformative
PMID: 6149515
ISSN: 0031-3998
CID: 75067
Faulty association of alpha- and beta-subunits in some forms of beta-hexosaminidase A deficiency
d'Azzo, A; Proia, R L; Kolodny, E H; Kaback, M M; Neufeld, E F
We have previously described the kinetics of association of the alpha- and beta-subunits of beta-hexosaminidase A in intact cultured human fibroblasts, using biosynthetic labeling and immunoprecipitation with antisera that distinguish between monomeric and associated alpha-chains (Proia, R. L., d'Azzo, A., and Neufeld, E. F. (1984) J. Biol. Chem. 259, 3350-3354). We now show lack of alpha-beta association in fibroblasts of several individuals deficient in beta-hexosaminidase A (5 patients with nonclassic forms of Tay-Sachs disease and 2 asymptomatic siblings). Defective association was accompanied by markedly reduced (less than one-tenth of normal) conversion of the alpha-chain precursor of Mr = 67,000 to the mature lysosomal form of Mr = 54,000. Analysis by hybridization with fibroblasts lacking the alpha- or beta-chain showed that the association defect resided in the alpha-chain. Most of the cell strains studied also had decreased synthesis of the alpha-chain, suggesting compound heterozygosity with the Ashkenazi Tay-Sachs (no synthesis) allele. An unusual feature of the association defect is the variability in the resulting clinical manifestations, even within families, implying that other factors determine the adequacy of the residual associated beta-hexosaminidase A in vivo
PMID: 6236221
ISSN: 0021-9258
CID: 75068