Abstract

Nephropathic cystinosis was first described in the early 1900s in a 21-mo-old boy who died of progressive anorexia; two siblings had previously died in infancy under similar circumstances (1). By meticulous observations and analyses, it became clear that abnormal cystine accumulation was characteristic of this autosomal recessive disease (2-4). Although some considered it to be a severe form of cystinuria, cystinosis was clearly distinguished from cystinuria by Bickel’s excellent clinical and biochemical observations (5). Clinically, untreated cystinosis patients would suffer renal tubular Fanconi syndrome, with hypophosphatemic rickets, hypokalemia, polyuria, polydypsia, dehydration, acidosis, and growth retardation followed by end-stage renal disease (ESRD) and death at approximately 10 yr of age (6,7). Shortly after the distinctive clinical aspects of cystinosis were defined, the intracellular location of cystine storage was determined. In the late 1960s, Schneider et al. (8), Schulman et al. (9), and Patrick and Lake (10) performed elegant biochemical studies to demonstrate that cystinosis cells stored cystine within the lysosome, an organelle discovered only two decades before (11). Subsequent work

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