The Swedish COG6-CDG experience and a comprehensive literature review

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Abstract

Here, we present the first two Swedish cases of Conserved Oligomeric Golgi complex subunit 6-congenital disorders of glycosylation (COG6-CDG). Their clinical symptoms include intellectual disability, Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), delayed brain myelinization, progressive microcephaly, joint laxity, hyperkeratosis, frequent infections, and enamel hypoplasia. In one family, compound heterozygous variants in COG6 were identified, where one (c.785A>G; p.Tyr262Cys) has previously been described in patients of Moroccan descent, whereas the other (c.238G>A; p.Glu80Lys) is undescribed. On the other hand, a previously undescribed homozygous duplication (c.1793_1795dup) was deemed the cause of the disease. To confirm the pathogenicity of the variants, we treated patient and control fibroblasts with the ER-Golgi transport inhibitor Brefeldin-A and show that patient cells manifest a significantly slower anterograde and retrograde ER-Golgi transport.

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Xia, Z. J., Ng, B. G., Jennions, E., Blomqvist, M., Sandqvist Wiklund, A., Hedberg-Oldfors, C., … Eklund, E. A. (2023). The Swedish COG6-CDG experience and a comprehensive literature review. JIMD Reports, 64(1), 79–89. https://doi.org/10.1002/jmd2.12338

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