ALG6-CDG in South Africa: Genotype-phenotype description of five novel patients

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Abstract

ALG6-CDG (formerly named CDG-Ic) (phenotype OMIM 603147, genotype OMIM 604566), is caused by defective endoplasmic reticulum α-1,3-glucosyltransferase (E.C 2.4.1.267) in the N-glycan assembly pathway (Grünewald et al. 2000). It is the second most frequent N-glycosylation disorder after PMM2-CDG; some 37 patients have been reported with 21 different ALG6 gene mutations (Haeuptle & Hennet 2009; Al-Owain 2010). We report on the clinical and biochemical findings of five novel Caucasian South African patients. The first patient had a severe neuro-gastrointestinal presentation. He was compound heterozygous for the known c.998C>T (p.A333V) mutation and the novel c.1338dupA (p.V447SfsX44) mutation. Four more patients, presenting with classical neurological involvement were identified and were compound heterozygous for the known c.257 + 5G>A splice mutation and the c.680G>A (p.G227E) missense mutation. The patients belong to a semi-isolated Caucasian community that may have originated from European pioneers who colonized South Africa in the seventeenth/eighteenth centuries.

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Dercksen, M., Crutchley, A. C., Honey, E. M., Lippert, M. M., Matthijs, G., Mienie, L. J., … Jaeken, J. (2013). ALG6-CDG in South Africa: Genotype-phenotype description of five novel patients. In JIMD Reports (Vol. 8, pp. 17–23). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/8904_2012_150

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