| Literature DB >> 22213132 |
Christian Thiel1, Nina Rind, Diana Popovici, Georg F Hoffmann, Kristen Hanson, Robert L Conway, Craig R Adamski, Elizabeth Butler, Rhonda Scanlon, Marie Lambert, Neophytos Apeshiotis, Charlotte Thiels, Gert Matthijs, Christian Körner.
Abstract
Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) comprise a clinically and biochemically heterogeneous group of monogenetic-inherited, multisystemic diseases that affect the biosynthesis of N- and/or O-glycans linked to glycoconjugates. Recently, we identified the first patient with a defect in the cytosolic-orientated GDP-mannose:Man(3-4) GlcNAc(2)-PP-dolichol alpha-1,2-mannosyltransferase (ALG11), who presented an accumulation of shortened dolichol-linked oligosaccharides leading to CDG-Ip (ALG11-CDG). Here we describe an improved metabolic labeling method that allowed the identification of three new CDG-Ip cases that were missed so far in routine diagnostics. Although all CDG-Ip patients carry different mutations in the ALG11 gene, they share a variety of clinical syndromes like an unremarkable prenatal period followed by developmental delay, psychomotor, and mental retardation, strabismus convergens and seizures occurring in the first year of life.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22213132 DOI: 10.1002/humu.22019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.878