| Literature DB >> 32681751 |
Bobby G Ng1, Erik A Eklund1,2, Sergey A Shiryaev1, Yin Y Dong3, Mary-Alice Abbott4, Carla Asteggiano5,6, Michael J Bamshad7,8, Eileen Barr9, Jonathan A Bernstein10,11, Shabeed Chelakkadan12, John Christodoulou13,14,15, Wendy K Chung16,17, Michael A Ciliberto18, Janice Cousin19, Fiona Gardiner20, Suman Ghosh21, William D Graf22, Stephanie Grunewald23, Katherine Hammond24, Natalie S Hauser25, George E Hoganson26, Kimberly M Houck27, Jennefer N Kohler10,28, Eva Morava29, Austin A Larson30, Pengfei Liu31,32, Sujana Madathil18, Colleen McCormack10,28, Naomi J L Meeks30, Rebecca Miller25, Kristin G Monaghan33, Deborah A Nickerson8, Timothy Blake Palculict33, Gabriela Magali Papazoglu5, Beth A Pletcher34, Ingrid E Scheffer20,35, Andrea Beatriz Schenone36, Rhonda E Schnur33, Yue Si33, Leah J Rowe30, Alvaro H Serrano Russi37,38, Rossana Sanchez Russo9, Farouq Thabet39, Allysa Tuite34, María Mercedes Villanueva36, Raymond Y Wang40,41, Richard I Webster42,43, Dorcas Wilson44,45, Alice Zalan26, Lynne A Wolfe46, Jill A Rosenfeld31,32, Lindsay Rhodes33, Hudson H Freeze1.
Abstract
Asparagine-linked glycosylation 13 homolog (ALG13) encodes a nonredundant, highly conserved, X-linked uridine diphosphate (UDP)-N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase required for the synthesis of lipid linked oligosaccharide precursor and proper N-linked glycosylation. De novo variants in ALG13 underlie a form of early infantile epileptic encephalopathy known as EIEE36, but given its essential role in glycosylation, it is also considered a congenital disorder of glycosylation (CDG), ALG13-CDG. Twenty-four previously reported ALG13-CDG cases had de novo variants, but surprisingly, unlike most forms of CDG, ALG13-CDG did not show the anticipated glycosylation defects, typically detected by altered transferrin glycosylation. Structural homology modeling of two recurrent de novo variants, p.A81T and p.N107S, suggests both are likely to impact the function of ALG13. Using a corresponding ALG13-deficient yeast strain, we show that expressing yeast ALG13 with either of the highly conserved hotspot variants rescues the observed growth defect, but not its glycosylation abnormality. We present molecular and clinical data on 29 previously unreported individuals with de novo variants in ALG13. This more than doubles the number of known cases. A key finding is that a vast majority of the individuals presents with West syndrome, a feature shared with other CDG types. Among these, the initial epileptic spasms best responded to adrenocorticotropic hormone or prednisolone, while clobazam and felbamate showed promise for continued epilepsy treatment. A ketogenic diet seems to play an important role in the treatment of these individuals.Entities:
Keywords: N-linked glycosylation; congenital disorders of glycosylation; epilepsy; whole exome sequencing
Year: 2020 PMID: 32681751 PMCID: PMC7722193 DOI: 10.1002/jimd.12290
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Inherit Metab Dis ISSN: 0141-8955 Impact factor: 4.982