| Literature DB >> 27206732 |
Matthias Kettwig1, Orly Elpeleg2, Eike Wegener3, Steffi Dreha-Kulaczewski3, Marco Henneke3, Jutta Gärtner3, Peter Huppke3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mutations in proteins involved in the glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor biosynthesis and remodeling pathway are associated with autosomal recessive forms of intellectual disability. Recently mutations in the PGAP1 gene that codes for PGAP1, a protein localized in the endoplasmic reticulum responsible for the first step of the remodeling of glycosylphosphatidylinositol was linked to a disorder characterized by psychomotor retardation and facial dysmorphism. Whole exome sequencing (WES) was performed in siblings with severely delayed myelination and psychomotor retardation. Mutations in PGAP1 were confirmed by Sanger sequencing and RNA analysis. A literature search was performed to describe the emerging phenotype of PGAP1 related disease. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Case report; Developmental Disabilities; Leukoencephalopathies; Neonatal seizures; PGAP1 mutations; Whole exome sequencing
Mesh:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27206732 PMCID: PMC4875637 DOI: 10.1186/s12883-016-0602-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Fig. 1Pedigree of reported family. Pedigree chart designer by CeGaT GmbH [11]
Fig. 2Structural and quantitative MRI of patients and a healthy age matched control. a;b;e;f;i: T2-weighted images at the corrected age of 12 months (a, e) and 2 years (b, f, i) of patients II-1 (a, b) and patient II-2 (e, f) and control (i) showing brain atrophy and significant delayed myelination in the patients. c;d;g;h;j;k: T1-weighted images and overlay of color coded MT saturation maps onto the corresponding T1-weighted images of both patients (c, d, g, h) and an age matched control (j, k) at age 2 years. Yellow represents high signal intensity considered to arise from properly myelinated WM. Both patients show widespread marked reductions of the myelinsensitive parameter MT saturation [12] when compared to the age matched control thereby emphasizing the delayed myelination. For detailed information about MT saturation maps see Additional file 1
Fig. 3Structural MRI and MR-Spectroscopy. MR-Spectroscopy of parieto-occipital WM from both patients. Placements of volume of interest are illustrated in T1- weighted images (left). Significant decreases (>2 SD of mean control value) of metabolite concentrations are indicated by black arrows. The black asterix indicates marginally low concentration. (tNAA: sum of N-acetylaspartate and N-acetylaspartylglutamate, tCr: sum of creatine and phosphocreatine, Cho: Choline, Ins: Inositol). For detailed information about MR-Spectroscopy see Additional file 1
Fig. 4Sanger sequencing and cDNA analysis. a: Sanger sequencing of the PGAP1 gene in patient II-1 (upper row) and a control (lower row). The arrows indicated the compound heterozygous mutations. b: Agarose gel electrophoresis of cDNA from blood of Patient II-1 on the right and healthy control on the left. The red rectangles indicate the eluted bands using for subsequently sequencing. Letter a, b and c refer to the corresponding sequences on the right
Clinical and genetic findings of PGAP1-disease
| This Study | Murakami et al. | Bosch et al. | Williams et al. | Novarino et al. | Granzow et al. | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| II-1 | II-2 | III-2 | III-3 | IV-3 | IV-4 | I-1 | I-2 | |||
| Family history | Dizygotic Caucasian twins of non-consanguineous parents | Sibling of consanguine Syrian relationship | non-consanguineous | non-consanguineous | consanguineos/1° cousins | consanguineos/1° cousins | ||||
| Genotype | c.334_335InsA (p.Arg112fs) | homozygous c.589_591del (p.Leu197del) | c.274_276del (p.Pro92del) | c.1572 T > A (p.Tyr524*) | homozygous splice site mutation c.1952 + 1G > T | homozygous splice site mutation c.1090-2A > G | ||||
| AND | AND | AND | ||||||||
| splice site mutation c.1173G > C (p.Leu391Leu) | c.921_925del (p.Lys308Asnfs*25) | c.1396C > T p.(Gln466*) | ||||||||
| Gender | M | M | F | M | M | M | M | M | M | F |
| Agea | 2 | 2 | 4 5/12 | 2 9/12 | 7 10/12 | 3 | 6 6/12 | 9/12 | 8 | 4 |
| Pregnancy/Birth | 30th weeks, maternal HELLP syndrome | unremarkable | planned CS, 38 weeks | 39 weeks | NA | NA | unremarkable | |||
| Facial dysmorphisms | (+) | (+) | + | + | + | + | - | - | - | - |
| Microcephaly | + | + | + | + | - | + | NA | NA | + | + |
| Intellectual disability | + | + | IQ < 35 | IQ < 35 | IQ 49 | + | + | - | + | + |
| Speech | Babble | Babble | Babble | NA | 2 6/12 | delayed | NA | NA | - | - |
| Motor developmental delay | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | - | + | + |
| Walking independently (years) | - | - | 4 5/12 | - | 2 6/12 | - | NA | NA | NA | - |
| Hypotonia | + | + | + | + | + | + | NA | NA | + | + |
| Neuropathy/Spasticity | - | - | NA | NA | - | - | + | + | - | + |
| Stereotypic/dyskinetic movements | - | - | + | + | - | + | + | + | + | - |
| Eating/Feeding | Milk bottles | Milk bottles | Milk bottles | Milk bottles | - | G-tube feeding | NA | NA | - | Failure to thrive |
| Respiration | Recurrent apneas | Recurrent apneas | - | - | - | - | NA | NA | + | - |
| Ophthalmological findings | - | - | - | - | CVI | CVI | - | - | Retinal dystrophy (ERG) | |
| Seizures/EEG abnormalities | −/− | +/+ | +/NA | -/NA | -/NA | −/+ | NA | NA | −/− | −/− |
| Imaging | Frontal accentuated brain atrophy and significant delayed myelination (MRI) | Brain atrophy (CT) | NA | Normal (MRI) | Thinning of thecorpus collosum, diminished white matter, prominence of the right posterior Sylvian fissure (MRI) | Prominent cortical sulci and widened sylvian fissures (MRI) | Corpus callosum agnesis, vermis hypoplasia, defective myelination (MRI) | Normal (MRI) | Normal (MRI) | |
CS caesarian section, CT computer tomography, CVI cortical visual impairment, EEG electroencephalogram, ERG electroretinogram, F female, IQ intelligence quotient, M male, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, NA not available
a Age at investigation