Urofacial syndrome: a genetic and congenital disease of aberrant urinary bladder innervation

The urofacial, or Ochoa, syndrome is characterised by congenital urinary bladder dysfunction together with an abnormal grimace upon smiling, laughing and crying. It can present as fetal megacystis. Postnatal features include urinary incontinence and incomplete bladder emptying due to simultaneous de...

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Veröffentlicht in:Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, West) West), 2014-04, Vol.29 (4), p.513-518
Hauptverfasser: Woolf, Adrian S., Stuart, Helen M., Roberts, Neil A., McKenzie, Edward A., Hilton, Emma N., Newman, William G.
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container_end_page 518
container_issue 4
container_start_page 513
container_title Pediatric nephrology (Berlin, West)
container_volume 29
creator Woolf, Adrian S.
Stuart, Helen M.
Roberts, Neil A.
McKenzie, Edward A.
Hilton, Emma N.
Newman, William G.
description The urofacial, or Ochoa, syndrome is characterised by congenital urinary bladder dysfunction together with an abnormal grimace upon smiling, laughing and crying. It can present as fetal megacystis. Postnatal features include urinary incontinence and incomplete bladder emptying due to simultaneous detrusor muscle and bladder outlet contractions. Vesicoureteric reflux is often present, and the condition can be complicated by urosepsis and end-stage renal disease. The syndrome has long been postulated to have neural basis, and it can be familial when it is inherited in an autosomal recessive manner. Most individuals with urofacial syndrome genetically studied to date carry biallelic, postulated functionally null mutations of HPSE2 or, less commonly, of LRIG2 . Little is known about the biology of the respective encoded proteins, heparanase 2 and leucine-rich repeats and immunoglobulin-like domains 2. Nevertheless, the observations that heparanase 2 can bind heparan sulphate proteolgycans and inhibit heparanase 1 enzymatic activity and that LRIG2 can modulate receptor tyrosine kinase growth factor signalling each point to biological roles relevant to tissue differentiation. Moreover, both heparanase 2 and LRIG2 proteins are detected in autonomic nerves growing into fetal bladders. The collective evidence is consistent with the hypothesis that urofacial syndrome genes code for proteins which work in a common pathway to facilitate neural growth into, and/or function within, the bladder. This molecular pathway may also have relevance to our understanding of the pathogenesis of other lower tract diseases, including Hinman–Allen syndrome, or non-neurogenic neurogenic bladder, and of the subset of individuals who have primary vesicoureteric reflux accompanied by bladder dysfunction.
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subjects Abdomen
Bladder
Chronic kidney failure
Congenital diseases
Facies
Genetic aspects
Humans
Kidney diseases
Kinases
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Mutation
Nephrology
Pediatrics
Proteins
Review
Risk factors
Urinary Bladder - abnormalities
Urinary Bladder - innervation
Urinary incontinence
Urogenital system
Urologic Diseases - congenital
Urologic Diseases - genetics
Urology
title Urofacial syndrome: a genetic and congenital disease of aberrant urinary bladder innervation
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