Familial juvenile hyperuricemic nephropathy and autosomal dominant medullary cystic kidney disease type 2: Two facets of the same disease?

Citation
K. Dahan et al., Familial juvenile hyperuricemic nephropathy and autosomal dominant medullary cystic kidney disease type 2: Two facets of the same disease?, J AM S NEPH, 12(11), 2001, pp. 2348-2357
Citations number
37
Categorie Soggetti
Urology & Nephrology","da verificare
Journal title
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY
ISSN journal
10466673 → ACNP
Volume
12
Issue
11
Year of publication
2001
Pages
2348 - 2357
Database
ISI
SICI code
1046-6673(200111)12:11<2348:FJHNAA>2.0.ZU;2-6
Abstract
Familial juvenile hyperuricemic nephropathy (FJHN) is an autosomal dominant disorder heralded by hyperuricemia during childhood; it is characterized b y chronic interstitial nephritis, with marked thickening of tubular basemen t membranes, and leads to progressive renal failure during adulthood. A gen e for FJHN in two Czech families was recently mapped to chromosome 16p11.2, close to the MCKD2 locus, which is responsible for a variant of autosomal dominant medullary cystic kidney disease observed in an Italian family. In a large Belgian family with FJHN, a tight linkage between the disorder and the marker D16S3060, located within the MCKD2 locus on chromosome 16p12 (ma ximal two-point logarithmic odds score of 3.74 at a recombination fraction of theta = 0), was observed in this study. The candidate region was further narrowed to a 1.3-Mb interval between D16S501 and D16S3036. Together with the striking clinical and pathologic resemblance between previously reporte d medullary cystic kidney disease type 2 and FJHN occurring in the Belgian family (including the presence of medullary cysts), this study suggests tha t these two disorders are facets of the same disease.