| Literature DB >> 33566311 |
Francesca Dassie1, Francesca Favaretto1, Silvia Bettini1, Matteo Parolin1, Marina Valenti2, Felix Reschke3, Thomas Danne3, Roberto Vettor1, Gabriella Milan1, Pietro Maffei4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Alström syndrome (ALMS) is a monogenic ultra-rare disorder with a prevalence of one per million inhabitants caused by pathogenic variants of ALMS1 gene. ALMS1 is located on chromosome 2p13, spans 23 exons and encodes a predicted 461.2-kDa protein of 4169 amino acids. The infantile cone-rod dystrophy with nystagmus and severe visual impairment is the earliest and most consistent clinical manifestation of ALMS. In addition, infantile transient cardiomyopathy, early childhood obesity with hyperphagia, deafness, insulin resistance (IR), type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), systemic fibrosis and progressive renal or liver dysfunction are common findings. ALMS1 encodes a large ubiquitously expressed protein that is associated with the centrosome and the basal body of primary cilium. CURRENT RESEARCH: The localisation of ALMS1 to the ciliary basal body suggests its contribution to ciliogenesis and/or normal ciliary function, or centriolar stability. ALMS1 regulate glucose transport through the actin cytoskeleton, which plays an important role in insulin-stimulated GLUT4 transport. Both extreme IR and β-cell failure are the two determinant factors responsible for the development of glucose metabolism alterations in ALMS. TREATMENT: Currently, there is no known cure for ALMS other than managing the underlying systemic diseases. When possible, individuals with ALMS and families should be referred to a centre of expertise and followed by a multidisciplinary team. Lifestyle modification, aerobic exercise and dietary induced weight loss are highly recommended as primary treatment for ALMS patients with T2DM and obesity.Entities:
Keywords: Alström syndrome; ENDO-ERN; Monogenetic diabetes; PBI-4050; Rare disease network; Setmelanotide
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33566311 DOI: 10.1007/s12020-021-02643-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Endocrine ISSN: 1355-008X Impact factor: 3.633