Mucolipidosis

Mucolipidosis is a group of inherited metabolic disorders that affect the body's ability to carry out the normal turnover of various materials within cells.[1]

Mucolipidosis
Other namesML
Mucolipidosis has an autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance
SpecialtyEndocrinology 

When originally named, the mucolipidoses derived their name from the similarity in presentation to both mucopolysaccharidoses and sphingolipidoses.[2] A biochemical understanding of these conditions has changed how they are classified. Four conditions (types I, II, III, and IV) were historically labeled as mucolipidoses. However, type I (sialidosis) is now classified as a glycoproteinosis,[2] and type IV (Mucolipidosis type IV) is now classified as a gangliosidosis.[3]

ML II and III

For details, see I-cell disease (type II) and Pseudo-Hurler polydystrophy (type III)

The other two types are closely related.

Mucolipidosis types II and III (ML II and ML III) result from a deficiency of the enzyme N-acetylglucosamine-1-phosphotransferase, which phosphorylates target carbohydrate residues on N-linked glycoproteins. Without this phosphorylation, the glycoproteins are not destined for lysosomes, and they escape outside the cell.

Genetics

The mucolipidoses are inherited in an autosomal recessive manner, that is, they occur only when a child inherits two copies of the defective gene, one from each parent. When both parents carry a defective gene, each of their children faces a one in four chance of developing one of the MLs. At the same time, each child also faces a one in two chance of inheriting only one copy of the defective gene. People who have only one defective gene are known as carriers. These individuals do not develop the disease but they can pass the defective gene on to their own children. Because the defective genes involved in certain forms of ML are known, tests can identify people who are carriers in some instances.

Diagnosis

The diagnosis of ML is based on clinical symptoms, a complete medical history, and certain laboratory tests. Symptoms of the disease are usually present at birth or begin in early childhood. Early symptoms can include skeletal abnormalities, vision problems, and developmental delays. Poor mental capacities, and difficulty reaching physical developmental milestones may also be result of mucolipidosis.

Treatment

There is currently no known treatment or specific therapy to cure this disease. However, there are multiple therapy techniques that can be used to help with some of the symptoms. Speech therapy and physical therapy may aid in a diagnosed child's motor and speech delays. Nutritional supplements such as iron and vitamin B12 may also be required if the patient needs them.

gollark: It's £25 or so and never goes on sale, so no.
gollark: Wait, you could actually play Factorio and experience the difficulty in centrally coordinating production of everything with just 200ish items and machines which are deterministic and always do the same thing vs the several million (in different locations) items modern society will need to produce and... well, economies of scale, and nondeterminism, and local variation, and whatnot.
gollark: Why not play Central Planning Simulator 2020?
gollark: (I did some hackery with the PWA manifest)
gollark: (also, you should actually be able to add osmarks.tk to your home screen on some browsers now)

See also

References

  1. RESERVED, INSERM US14 -- ALL RIGHTS. "Orphanet: Mucolipidosis type II". www.orpha.net. Retrieved 2017-05-16.
  2. Julia A. McMillan; Ralph D. Feigin; Catherine DeAngelis; M. Douglas Jones (1 April 2006). Oski's pediatrics: principles & practice. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. pp. 1–. ISBN 978-0-7817-3894-1. Retrieved 3 November 2010.
  3. "ICD-10". Retrieved 2010-11-03.
Classification
External resources
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.