Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Enzyme
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Query: EC:2.4.1.18 (
branching enzyme
)
628
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Glycogen storage disease type IV (GSD-IV) is an autosomal recessive disease resulting from deficient glycogen-
branching enzyme
(GBE) activity. The classic and most common form is progressive liver cirrhosis and failure leading to either liver transplantation or death by 5 yr of age. However, the liver disease is not always progressive. In addition, a neuromuscular type of the disease has been reported. The molecular basis of
GSD
-IV is not known, nor is there a known reason for the clinical variability. We studied the GBE gene in patients with various presentations of
GSD
-IV. Three point mutations in the GBE gene were found in two patients with the classical presentation: R515C, F257L, and R524X. Transient expression experiments showed that these mutations inactivated GBE activity. Two point mutations, L224P and Y329S, were detected in two separate alleles of a patient with the nonprogressive hepatic form. The L224P resulted in complete loss of GBE activity, whereas the Y329S resulted in loss of approximately 50% of GBE activity. The Y329S allele was also detected in another patient with the nonprogressive form of
GSD
-IV but not in 35 unrelated controls or in patients with the more severe forms of
GSD
-IV. A 210-bp deletion from nucleotide 873 to 1082 of the GBE cDNA was detected in a patient with the fatal neonatal neuromuscular presentation. This deletion, representing the loss of one full exon, was caused by a 3' acceptor splicing site mutation (ag to aa). The deletion abolished GBE activity. Our studies indicate that the three different forms of
GSD
-IV were caused by mutations in the same GBE gene. The data also suggest that the significant retention of GBE activity in the Y329S allele may be a reason for the mild disease. Further study of genotype/phenotype correlations may yield useful information in predicting the clinical outcomes.
...
PMID:Hepatic and neuromuscular forms of glycogen storage disease type IV caused by mutations in the same glycogen-branching enzyme gene. 861 47
Glycogen storage disease type IV (GSD-IV) is a rare autosomal recessive disease caused by deficient
glycogen branching enzyme
(
GBE
). We report a 15-month-old female patient with
GSD
-IV who exhibited an abdominal distension and failure to thrive for 9 months. The patient showed hepatosplenomegaly with massive ascites. The laboratory findings showed abnormal liver functions including prolongation of prothrombin time and partial thromboplastin time. The light microscopic and electron microscopic findings of the liver biopsy specimen were consistent with
GSD
-IV. Measurement of glycogen quantity in the red blood cells showed increased storage of glycogen in the patient and interestingly, in her mother. The
GBE
activity of the patient's red blood cells was undetectable. The patient's ascites, general condition, and laboratory findings have been improved with supportive treatment with diuretics and a low dose of prednisolone.
...
PMID:Glycogen storage disease type IV: a case report. 961 Jun 25
Deficiency of
glycogen branching enzyme
activity causes glycogen storage disease type IV (GSD-IV). Clinically,
GSD
-IV has variable clinical presentations ranging from a fatal neonatal neuromuscular disease, to a progressive liver cirrhosis form, and to a milder liver disease without progression. Current methods for prenatal and postnatal diagnosis are based on an indirect method of measuring the enzyme activity, which has a limited sensitivity and cannot be used to distinguish patients with these variable clinical phenotypes. In this study, a
GSD
-IV family with a non-progressive hepatic form of the disease requested prenatal diagnosis. Determination of the
branching enzyme
activity in cultivated amniocytes showed 20 per cent residual activity overlapping with the level detected in the heterozygotes. Mutation analysis revealed that the fetus carried two mutant alleles, L224P and Y329S, the same as the proband of this family. The fetus was predicted to be affected and postnatally his clinical presentation is consistent with the diagnosis. We conclude that DNA mutation analysis should be used in the prenatal diagnosis of
GSD
-IV, especially in the situation of high residual enzyme activity.
...
PMID:Prenatal diagnosis of glycogen storage disease type IV using PCR-based DNA mutation analysis. 1052 41
Glycogen storage disease type IV (GSD-IV) is a rare autosomal recessive disease caused by a deficiency of
glycogen branching enzyme
(
GBE
) activity. This results in the accumulation of abnormal glycogen in the liver and other organs. We report the case of a 14-month-old female patient with typical hepatic pathologic findings of
GSD
-IV. The patient suffered from decreased muscle tone and progressive hepatosplenomegaly since birth. A wedge biopsy of the liver showed enlarged hepatocytes with colorless to faintly eosinophilic ground glass intracytoplasmic inclusions. Portal fibrosis and lobular, fibrous septa were present. Ultrastructure of the inclusions revealed non-membrane-bound fibrillar material 5 nm in maximal diameter. Enzyme study revealed a total deficiency of
GBE
activity.
...
PMID:Glycogen storage disease type IV: a case report. 1053 7
There are 11 glycogen diseases (
GSD
), nine of which are associated with myopathy. Most of these glycogen storage myopathies are associated with dynamic symptoms and signs in that the major neuromuscular complaints are exercise-induced muscle pain, cramps, and myoglobinura (e.g., GSD V or McArdle's disease associated with myophosphorylase deficiency). The other types of glycogen storage myopathies are considered static in that they are associated with fixed weakness rather than dynamic symptoms and signs. The static glycogen storage myopathies include: GSD I or Pompe's disease (acid maltase or (-glucosidase deficiency), GSD II or Cori-Forbes disease (debranching enzyme deficiency), and GSD IV or Andersen's disease (
branching enzyme
deficiency). This article reviews the clinical, laboratory, electrophysiologic, histopathologic, and pathogenesis of these static
GSD
myopathies.
...
PMID:Acid maltase deficiency and related myopathies. 1065 72
Glycogen storage disease type IV (GSD-IV), also known as Andersen disease or amylopectinosis (MIM 23250), is a rare autosomal recessive disorder caused by a deficiency of
glycogen branching enzyme
(
GBE
) leading to the accumulation of amylopectin-like structures in affected tissues. The disease is extremely heterogeneous in terms of tissue involvement, age of onset and clinical manifestations. The human
GBE
cDNA is approximately 3-kb in length and encodes a 702-amino acid protein. The
GBE
amino acid sequence shows a high degree of conservation throughout species. The human
GBE
gene is located on chromosome 3p14 and consists of 16 exons spanning at least 118 kb of chromosomal DNA. Clinically the classic Andersen disease is a rapidly progressive disorder leading to terminal liver failure unless liver transplantation is performed. Several mutations have been reported in the
GBE
gene in patients with classic phenotype. Mutations in the
GBE
gene have also been identified in patients with the milder non-progressive hepatic form of the disease. Several other variants of
GSD
-IV have been reported: a variant with multi-system involvement including skeletal and cardiac muscle, nerve and liver; a juvenile polysaccharidosis with multi-system involvement but normal
GBE
activity; and the fatal neonatal neuromuscular form associated with a splice site mutation in the
GBE
gene. Other presentations include cardiomyopathy, arthrogryposis and even hydrops fetalis. Polyglucosan body disease, characterized by widespread upper and lower motor neuron lesions, can present with or without
GBE
deficiency indicating that different biochemical defects could result in an identical phenotype. It is evident that this disease exists in multiple forms with enzymatic and molecular heterogeneity unparalleled in the other types of glycogen storage diseases.
...
PMID:The variable presentations of glycogen storage disease type IV: a review of clinical, enzymatic and molecular studies. 1194 34
We report a 17-month-old female patient with a rare cause of cardiomyopathy secondary to accumulation of amylopectin-like material (fibrillar glycogen) isolated to the heart. Evidence of amylopectinosis isolated to cardiac myocytes in this patient was demonstrated by histology and electron microscopy. Glycogen content,
glycogen branching enzyme
(
GBE
) activity, as well as phosphofructokinase enzyme activities measured in liver, skeletal muscle, fibroblasts and ex-transplanted heart tissue were all in the normal to lower normal ranges. Normal skeletal muscle and liver tissue histology and
GBE
activity, normal
GBE
activity in skin fibroblasts, plus normal
GBE
gene sequence in this patient exclude the classical
branching enzyme
deficiency (type IV
GSD
). We believe that this is an as yet uncharacterized and novel phenotype of
GSD
associated with cardiomyopathy, in which there is an imbalance in the regulation of glycogen metabolism limited to the heart.
...
PMID:Amylopectinosis disease isolated to the heart with normal glycogen branching enzyme activity and gene sequence. 1578 5
Glycogen storage disease type IV (GSD-IV) is an autosomal recessive genetic disorder due to a deficiency in the activity of the
glycogen branching enzyme
(
GBE
). A deficiency in
GBE
activity results in the accumulation of glycogen with fewer branching points and long, unbranched outer chains. The disorder results in a variable phenotype, including musculoskeletal, cardiac, neurological, and hepatic involvement, alone or in continuum, which can be identified at any stage of life. The classic form of
GSD
-IV is a hepatic presentation, which presents in the first 18 months of life with failure to thrive, hepatomegaly, and cirrhosis that progresses to liver failure, resulting in death by age 5 years. A severe congenital musculoskeletal phenotype with death in the neonatal period has also been described. We report an unusual case of congenital musculoskeletal presentation of
GSD
-IV with stable congenital hypotonia, gross motor delay, and severe fibro-fatty replacement of the musculature, but no hepatic or cardiac involvement. Molecular analysis revealed two novel missense mutations with amino acid changes in the
GBE
gene (Q236H and R262C), which may account for the mild phenotype.
...
PMID:Non-lethal congenital hypotonia due to glycogen storage disease type IV. 1652 37
Glycogen branching enzyme deficiency (glycogen storage disease type IV,
GSD
-IV) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder of the glycogen synthesis with high mortality. Two female newborns showed severe hypotonia at birth and both died of cardiorespiratory failure, at 4 and 12 weeks, respectively. In both patients, muscle biopsies showed deposits of PAS-positive diastase-resistant material and biochemical analysis in cultured fibroblasts showed markedly reduced
glycogen branching enzyme
activity. Direct sequencing of GBE1 gene revealed that patient 1 was homozygous for a novel c.691+5 g>c in intron 5 (IVS5+5 g>c). RT-PCR analysis of GBE1 transcripts from fibroblasts cDNA showed that this mutation produce aberrant splicing. Patient 2 was homozygous for a novel c.1643G>A mutation leading to a stop at codon 548 in exon 13 (p.W548X). These data underscore that in
GSD
-IV a severe phenotype correlates with null mutations, and indicate that RNA analysis is necessary to characterize functional consequences of intronic mutations.
...
PMID:Null mutations and lethal congenital form of glycogen storage disease type IV. 1766 46
A diagnosis of
GSD
-IV was established in three premature, floppy infants based on characteristic, however unusually pleomorphic polyglucosan bodies at the electron microscopic level,
glycogen branching enzyme
deficiency in two cases, and the identification of GBE1 mutations in two cases. Pleomorphic polyglucosan bodies in muscle fibers and macrophages, and less severe in Schwann cells and microglial cells were noted. Most of the inclusions were granular and membrane-bound; others had an irregular contour, were more electron dense and were not membrane bound, or homogenous ('hyaline'). A paracrystalline pattern of granules was repeatedly noted showing a periodicity of about 10 nm with an angle of about 60 degrees or 120 degrees at sites of changing linear orientation. Malteser crosses were noted under polarized light in the larger inclusions. Some inclusions were PAS positive and others were not. Severely atrophic muscle fibers without inclusions, but with depletion of myofibrils in the plane of section studied indicated the devastating myopathic nature of the disease. Schwann cells and peripheral axons were less severely affected as was the spinal cord. Two novel protein-truncating mutations (c.1077insT, p.V359fsX16; g.101517_127067del25550insCAGTACTAA, DelExon4-7) were identified in these families. The present findings extend previous studies indicating that truncating GBE1 mutations cause a spectrum of severe diseases ranging from generalized intrauterine hydrops to fatal perinatal hypotonia and fatal cardiomyopathy in the first months of life.
...
PMID:Congenital type IV glycogenosis: the spectrum of pleomorphic polyglucosan bodies in muscle, nerve, and spinal cord with two novel mutations in the GBE1 gene. 1866 Nov 38
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