Amyloidoses are rare life-threatening diseases caused by protein misfolding of normally soluble proteins. The fatal outcome is predominantly due to renal failure and/or cardiac dysfunction. Because amyloid fibrils formed by all amyloidogenic proteins share structural similarity, amyloidoses may be studied in transgenic models expressing any amyloidogenic protein.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmyloid A (AA) amyloidosis is a fatal protein deposition disease afflicting a small percentage of patients with chronic inflammation. Factors other than inflammation that determine development of AA amyloidosis remain largely unknown. The subunit protein comprising AA amyloid fibrils is derived from serum amyloid A (SAA), specifically its amino-terminal portion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeveral members of a family died from renal failure as a result of systemic amyloidosis. Extensive studies to detect previously documented gene mutations associated with amyloidosis failed to identify a causative factor. In search of the genetic basis for this syndrome, amyloid fibrils were isolated from renal tissue of a member of the kin who died while on renal dialysis.
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