Cases reported "Kidney Diseases"

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1/3. Hepatocyte nuclear factor-1beta: a new kindred with renal cysts and diabetes and gene expression in normal human development.

    The hepatocyte nuclear factor-1beta (HNF-1beta) transcription factor controls endoderm development. Human mutations cause early-onset diabetes mellitus and have recently been associated with dysplastic, hypoplastic, and glomerulocystic kidneys. A new kindred with this "renal cysts and diabetes" syndrome is described, and nephrogenic HNF-1beta expression is defined. The proband had congenital cystic kidneys: over the next 12 yr, his renal function was impaired, but he was normoglycemic. His mother developed diabetes during pregnancy: renal ultrasonography at age 24 yr was normal, but she subsequently developed cysts. Both subjects have a heterozygous frameshift mutation in HNF-1beta that results from a 1-bp insertion in exon 5 (Y352fsinsA). When reverse-transcription PCR and in situ hybridization were used, HNF-1beta mRNA was detected in normal human metanephroi, with the highest levels of transcripts localized to fetal medullary and cortical collecting ducts and low levels of expression in nephrogenic cortex mesenchyme, primitive nephron tubules, and immature glomeruli. These results constitute the first demonstration of HNF-1beta expression during human nephrogenesis and emphasize a disease spectrum associated with HNF-1beta mutation.
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ranking = 1
keywords = hybridization
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2/3. Epstein-Barr virus infection-associated renal disease: diagnostic use of molecular hybridization technology in patients with negative serology.

    There are only a few reports of renal disease associated with Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection. The diagnosis of EBV infection in these previously reported patients was based primarily on positive serology. Two patients with renal disease who, despite repeatedly negative serologies, were shown by molecular hybridization techniques--in situ hybridization (ISH) and polymerase chain reaction (PCR)--to have EBV infection are reported here. Site-specific molecular probes directed against specific, tandemly repeated EBV genomic regions were used. A synthetic 23-mer terminally biotin-labeled oligonucleotide probe selected from the EBV NotI region was used for ISH. For PCR, oligonucleotide primers were designed from sequences of the highly conserved, long internal direct repeat region of EBV to specifically amplify a 110-base-pair segment. The first patient, a 3-yr-old girl with a 1-yr history of fatigue, fever, splenomegaly, and lymphadenopathy developed hematuria. A renal biopsy revealed widespread glomerular mesangiolysis admixed with segmental mesangial sclerosis; no immune deposits were noted by electron microscopy or immunofluorescence. ISH on paraffin sections of the resected spleen and lymph nodes was positive for EBV. The second patient, a 28-yr-old male renal allograft recipient, received a double dose of OKT3. Seven weeks after transplantation, a renal biopsy revealed a lymphoproliferative disorder. paraffin sections of the nephrectomy specimen were positive for EBV by both ISH and PCR. It was concluded that (1) EBV cannot be excluded on the basis of multiple negative serologies in some patients, and (2) ISH and PCR may lead to the detection of viral genomic information in renal and nonrenal tissues.
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ranking = 6
keywords = hybridization
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3/3. Renal encephalitozoon (Septata) intestinalis infection in a patient with AIDS. Post-mortem identification by means of transmission electron microscopy and PCR.

    We describe the occurrence of renal encephalitozoon (Septata) intestinalis infection in a 35-year-old AIDS patient who died with disseminated tuberculosis. The patient did not complain of specific symptoms involving the kidney or lower urinary tract during life, but at autopsy, light microscopic examination of the kidney revealed numerous small round or oval bodies in the tubules and tubular cell cytoplasm that were interpreted as intracellular protozoa. Transmission electron microscopy of tissue retrieved from paraffin-embedded samples identified these organisms as microsporidia belonging to the Encephalitozoonidae family, but did not allow definitive identification of the species of infecting parasite. This was made possible only by means of Southern blot hybridization after the polymerase chain reaction, which recognized the micro-organism as E. intestinalis.
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ranking = 1
keywords = hybridization
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