An unexplained congenital disorder of glycosylation-II in a child with neurohepatic involvement, hypercholesterolemia and hypoceruloplasminemia

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Abstract

We report on a 12-year-old adopted boy with psychomotor disability, absence seizures, and normal brain MRI. He showed increased (but initially, at 5 months, normal) serum cholesterol, increased alkaline phosphatases, transiently increased transaminases and hypoceruloplasminemia with normal serum and urinary copper. Blood levels of immunoglobulins, haptoglobin, antithrombin, and factor XI were normal. A type 2 serum transferrin isoelectrofocusing and hypoglycosylation of apoCIII pointed to a combined N- and O-glycosylation defect. Neither CDG panel analysis with 79 CDG-related genes, nor whole exome sequencing revealed the cause of this CDG. Whole genome sequencing was not performed since the biological parents of this adopted child were not available.

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Calvo, P. L., Spada, M., Rabbone, I., Pinon, M., Porta, F., Cisarò, F., … Jaeken, J. (2018). An unexplained congenital disorder of glycosylation-II in a child with neurohepatic involvement, hypercholesterolemia and hypoceruloplasminemia. In JIMD Reports (Vol. 38, pp. 97–100). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/8904_2017_35

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