Amyloid : the international journal of experimental and clinical investigation : the official journal of the International Society of Amyloidosis
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Serum amyloid A1 (SAA1), one of the two isotypes of acute phase SAA, is the predominant precursor to amyloid A (AA) protein, the chief constituent of fibrillar deposits in reactive (AA) amyloidosis. Prolonged hyperexpression of SAA protein accompanying chronic inflammation is critical to, but seems not to be sufficient for, the development of AA amyloidosis. Several previous studies have investigated the possibility of linkage between SAA1 exon 3 polymorphisms and susceptibility to amyloidosis. ⋯ The frequency of the -13T allele was 0.708 and 0.521 in Japanese rheumatoid arthritis patients with and patients without AA amyloidosis, respectively, and 0.536 and 0.196 in American Caucasian patients with AA amyloidosis and control subjects, respectively. In Caucasians, the -13T allele had a stronger association with amyloidosis than did the SAA1.1 allele. These findings suggest that -13T is a genetic background for AA amyloidosis in both Japanese and Caucasians and the difference in prevalence of AA amyloidosis in the two ethnic groups may be due, at least in part, to a difference in the frequency of the -13T SAA1 allele.
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Case Reports
First Spanish family with familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy associated to TTR Thr49Ile mutation.
We present a Spanish patient with familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy associated with the TTR Thr49Ile mutation previously described in a Japanese patient. This is the first report in a Caucasian patient and the second in the literature. Age of onset at 66 and the clinical picture were similar to the Japanese patient: sensorimotor polyneuropathy, digestive autonomic disturbances, cardiomyopathy and loss of weight. The mutation was diagnosed by DNA sequencing and induced mutation restriction analysis.