4.4 Article

Congenital disorder of glycosylation type Ij (CDG-Ij, DPAGT1-CDG): Extending the clinical and molecular spectrum of a rare disease

Journal

MOLECULAR GENETICS AND METABOLISM
Volume 105, Issue 4, Pages 634-641

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ymgme.2012.01.001

Keywords

Congenital disorder of glycosylation; CDG; CDG-Ij; DPAGT1; hypoglycosylation; Magnesium-dependency

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [LE371/3-2]
  2. Korber-Stiftung
  3. SHS

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Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) are caused by enzymatic defects of the formation or processing of lipid-linked oligosaccharides and glycoproteins. Since the majority of proteins is glycosylated, a defect in a singular CDG enzyme leads to a multisytemic disease with secondary malfunction of thousands of proteins. CDG-Ij (DPAGT1-CDG) is caused by a defect of the human DPAGT1 (UDP-GlcNAc: Dolichol Phosphate N-Acetylglucosamine-1-Phosphotransferase), catalyzing the first step of N-linked glycosylation. So far the clinical phenotype of only one CDG-Ij patient has been described. The patient showed severe muscular hypotonia, intractable seizures, developmental delay, mental retardation, microcephaly and exotropia. Molecular studies of this patient revealed the heterozygous mutation c.660A>G (Y170C; paternal) in combination with an uncharacterized splicing defect (maternal). Two further mutations, c.890A>T (I297F) and c.162-8 G>A as a splicing defect were detected when analyzing DPAGT1 in two affected siblings of a second family. We report two new patients with the novel homozygous mutation, c341 C>G (A114G). causing a severe clinical phenotype, characterized by hyperexcitability, intractable seizures, bilateral cataracts, progressive microcephaly and muscular hypotonia. Both our patients died within their first year of life. With the discovery of this novel mutation and a detailed clinical description we extend the clinical features of CDC-Ij in order to improve early detection of this disease. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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