| Literature DB >> 26260076 |
Daisy Rymen1, Julia Winter2, Peter M Van Hasselt3, Jaak Jaeken4, Cigdem Kasapkara5, Gulden Gokçay6, Hanneke Haijes3, Philippe Goyens7, Aysegul Tokatli8, Christian Thiel9, Oliver Bartsch10, Jochen Hecht11, Peter Krawitz12, Hubertus C M T Prinsen13, Eva Mildenberger2, Gert Matthijs14, Uwe Kornak15.
Abstract
The conserved oligomeric Golgi (COG) complex consists of eight subunits and plays a crucial role in Golgi trafficking and positioning of glycosylation enzymes. Mutations in all COG subunits, except subunit 3, have been detected in patients with congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) of variable severity. So far, 3 families with a total of 10 individuals with biallelic COG6 mutations have been described, showing a broad clinical spectrum. Here we present 7 additional patients with 4 novel COG6 mutations. In spite of clinical variability, we delineate the core features of COG6-CDG i.e. liver involvement (9/10), microcephaly (8/10), developmental disability (8/10), recurrent infections (7/10), early lethality (6/10), and hypohidrosis predisposing for hyperthermia (6/10) and hyperkeratosis (4/10) as ectodermal signs. Regarding all COG6-related disorders a genotype-phenotype correlation can be discerned ranging from deep intronic mutations found in Shaheen syndrome as the mildest form to loss-of-function mutations leading to early lethal CDG phenotypes. A comparison with other COG deficiencies suggests ectodermal changes to be a hallmark of COG6-related disorders. Our findings aid clinical differentiation of this complex group of disorders and imply subtle functional differences between the COG complex subunits.Entities:
Keywords: CDG; COG6; Congenital disorder of glycosylation; Conserved oligomeric Golgi complex
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26260076 DOI: 10.1016/j.ymgme.2015.07.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Genet Metab ISSN: 1096-7192 Impact factor: 4.797