Pharmacological correction of neonatal lethal hepatic dysfunction in a murine model of hereditary tyrosinaemia type I

M Grompe, S Lindstedt, M Al-Dhalimy, NG Kennaway… - Nature …, 1995 - nature.com
M Grompe, S Lindstedt, M Al-Dhalimy, NG Kennaway, J Papaconstantinou…
Nature genetics, 1995nature.com
Hereditary tyrosinaemia type I, a severe autosomal recessive metabolic disease, affects the
liver and kidneys and is caused by deficiency of fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase (FAH). Mice
homozygous for a FAH gene disruption have a neonatal lethal phenotype caused by liver
dysfunction and do not represent an adequate model of the human disease. Here we
demonstrate that treatment of affected animals with 2–(2–nitro–4–trifluoro–methylbenzyol)–
1, 3–cyclohexanedione abolished neonatal lethality, corrected liver function and partially …
Abstract
Hereditary tyrosinaemia type I, a severe autosomal recessive metabolic disease, affects the liver and kidneys and is caused by deficiency of fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase (FAH). Mice homozygous for a FAH gene disruption have a neonatal lethal phenotype caused by liver dysfunction and do not represent an adequate model of the human disease. Here we demonstrate that treatment of affected animals with 2–(2–nitro–4–trifluoro–methylbenzyol)–1,3–cyclohexanedione abolished neonatal lethality, corrected liver function and partially normalized the altered expression pattern of hepatic mRNAs. The prolonged lifespan of affected animals resulted in a phenotype analogous to human tyrosinaemia type I including hepatocellular carcinoma. The adult FAH−/− mouse will serve as useful model for studies of the pathophysiology and treatment of hereditary tyrosinaemia type I as well as hepatic cancer.
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