4.7 Article

DPM2-CDG: A muscular dystrophy-dystroglycanopathy syndrome with severe epilepsy

Journal

ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY
Volume 72, Issue 4, Pages 550-558

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ana.23632

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek, Vlaanderen (Belgium) [G.0553.08]
  2. PEPS-CNRS (France)
  3. ANR Jeune Chercheur (France)
  4. Interuniversity Attraction Poles Program of the Belgian Science Policy (Belgium) [6/05]
  5. Prinses Beatrix Fonds for neuromuscular research [W.OR09-15]

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Objective: Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) are a group of metabolic diseases due to defects in protein and lipid glycosylation. We searched for the primary defect in 3 children from 2 families with a severe neurological phenotype, including profound developmental delay, intractable epilepsy, progressive microcephaly, severe hypotonia with elevated blood creatine kinase levels, and early fatal outcome. There was clinical evidence of a muscular dystrophydystroglycanopathy syndrome, supported by deficient O-mannosylation by muscle immunohistochemistry. Methods: Biochemical and molecular methods were combined to pinpoint the defect in the glycosylation pathway in the endoplasmic reticulum. Results: Metabolic investigations revealed CDG-I, pointing to a defect in protein N-glycosylation in the endoplasmic reticulum. Analysis of lipid-linked oligosaccharides in fibroblasts showed accumulation of Dol-PP-GlcNAc(2)-Man(5). DNA analysis revealed mutations in DPM2, 1 of the subunits of the dolichol-phosphate-mannose (DPM) synthase; the patient in the first family is compound heterozygous for 2 mutations (c.68A>G, predicting a missense mutation p.Y23C and c.4-1G>C, a splice mutation), whereas the patients in the second family are homozygous for the same missense mutation (c.68A>G, p.Y23C). Interpretation: We describe a new CDG, due to a deficiency of DPM2. Hence, mutations have now been described in the genes for the 3 subunits of DPM: DPM1, DPM2, and DPM3, whereby DPM2-CDG links the congenital disorders of glycosylation to the congenital muscular dystrophies. ANN NEUROL 2012;72:550558

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