Title of article :
Molecular and Biochemical Aspects of Hypophosphatemic Rickets: An Updated Review
Author/Authors :
Asadzadeh Manjili ، Fateme - Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences , Bakhshi Aliabad ، Mohammad Hosein - Shahid Sadoughi University of Medical Sciences , Kalantar ، Seyed Mehdi - Yazd Reproductive Science Institute, Yazd University of Medical Sciences , Sahebzamani ، Afsaneh , Safa ، Amin - Zabol University of Medical Sciences
Pages :
10
From page :
113
To page :
122
Abstract :
Rickets is associated with aberrant mineralization in growth plates leading to the deformity of bone structure. The two main types of rickets are phosphopenic and calcipenic rickets. Phosphopenic rickets is found in a variety of sorts; the most common is the Xlinked dominant hypophosphatemic rickets (HR) caused by a mutation in PHEX gene. The FGF23, DMP1, and PHEX are among the most important genes in the etiology of HR disorder. The interaction of these genes is essential for proper bone mineralization. However, the underlying mechanism is not comprehensively known. For data collection, we searched the most recent articles in Science Direct, PubMed and Google Scholar using hypophosphatemia, mutation, PHEX and FGF23 as keywords. The search results revealed that most of the articles have mainly focused on various types of mutations causing hypophosphatemia in different populations. However, there was a lack of enough studies elucidating the interaction of genes involved in this disorder. This review mainly focuses on the various types of phosphopenic rickets and genetic mutations of various agents crucial for bone mineralization and how these mutations exert their effects on biochemical agents like vitamin D and parathyroid hormone (PTH) . It also reviews the available treatment and molecular techniques for managing this disorder.
Keywords :
Rickets , Mutation , Phosphate , Genetic
Journal title :
International Journal of Basic Science in Medicine
Serial Year :
2017
Journal title :
International Journal of Basic Science in Medicine
Record number :
2464895
Link To Document :
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