Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (hypotonia)
5,860 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein (CDG) syndrome in its most severe form (neonatal olivopontocerebellar atrophy) is a life-threatening multisystem disease. We report a neonate who was referred for cardiological assessment because of respiratory distress, a murmur and episodes of desaturation. After initial spontaneous improvement he presented at 9 weeks with evidence of a severe hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM). The diagnosis of CDG syndrome was suggested by the characteristic dysmorphic features, hypotonia, visual inattention and severe failure to thrive; it was confirmed by electrophoresis of serum transferrin. HOCM can be a feature of the CDG syndrome, in addition to the (previously reported) pericardial effusions.
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PMID:Hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy in a neonate with the carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome. 129 80

Two brothers presented with olivopontocerebellar atrophy of neonatal onset. The clinical features (failure to thrive, hypotonia, liver disease, effusions, and visual inattention) were similar to those of the four cases already reported, as were the necropsy findings of olivopontocerebellar atrophy, hepatic steatosis and fibrosis, and microcystic renal changes. The clinical similarities between this and the disialotransferrin developmental deficiency syndrome were noted. The characteristic abnormality of serum transferrin found in the latter syndrome was also found in the two cases reported here. We suggest that both syndromes are caused by the same, or related, defects in glycoprotein metabolism.
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PMID:Olivopontocerebellar atrophy of neonatal onset and disialotransferrin developmental deficiency syndrome. 192 7

A newborn female, the second child of consanguineous parents, exhibited general muscle hypotonia, apathy, hepatomegaly and failure to thrive from birth and signs of craniofacial dysmorphia were present. Pipecolic and trihydroxicoprostanoic acid were excreted in the urine and serum transferrin, ferritin and iron were markedly elevated. At the age of 7 weeks the baby died of respiratory insufficiency. Besides malformations of the brain, renal cysts, liver damage with hypoplastic intrahepatic bile ducts and cholestasis, increased storage of iron and cytochemically proven deficiency of peroxisomes in liver and kidney, morphological studied provided evidence of a mitochondrial myopathy in striated muscle with the accumulation of enlarged bizarre mitochondria, showing only minor structural abnormalities. No defects of NADH-reductase, succinate-dehydrogenase or cytochrome-c-oxidase were demonstrated histochemically. Cytochemical-ultrastructural investigation of mitochondrial ATPase revealed activation of the ATP-synthesising enzyme even before the addition of an uncoupler, this indicating loosely coupled oxidative phosphorylation. In addition a high rate of subcellular autophagy with segregation of mitochondria and focal loss of fibrils was present. Muscle damage in Zellweger syndrome appears to be the consequence of complex, interacting metabolic processes. The mitochondrial myopathy thereby induced allows a better understanding of general muscle hypotonia, one of the leading symptoms of this disorder.
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PMID:Mitochondrial myopathy with loosely coupled oxidative phosphorylation in a case of Zellweger syndrome. A cytochemical-ultrastructural study. 614 41

We diagnosed the carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome in five children who were seen during their first year of life with failure to thrive, feeding difficulties, psychomotor retardation, hypotonia, esotropia, inverted nipples, lipodystrophy, pericardial effusion, and hepatic dysfunction. Steatosis was observed in liver biopsy specimens, and cerebellar hypoplasia was present on computed tomography. The disorder is characterized by a complex carbohydrate deficiency in certain glycoproteins, notably transferrin, which can be used as a marker of the disease. The carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome may be an important and easily identifiable cause of failure to thrive and neurologic dysfunction in infancy. The presence of the disorder in siblings of different gender and the finding of biochemical abnormalities in some unaffected parents suggest an autosomal recessive inheritance.
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PMID:Early manifestations of the carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome. 841 16

Carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome type 1 (CDGS-1) is an autosomal recessive hereditary metabolic disorder, the gene locus of which is chromosome 16p13. The disorder is characterised by genetic heterogeneity, and by decrease in the gene product, phosphomannomutase 2, though the heterogeneity is far less manifest in affected Swedish families. Its incidence is 1/80,000 live births, and the under-5 mortality rate over 30 per cent. The causes of death are liver failure, cardiac tamponade, haemorrhaging, and severe infection. The characteristic biochemical aberration is the occurrence of deficient carbohydrate chains in many but not all circulating glycoproteins, and the serum and blood concentrations of some glycoproteins may be above or below normal. These changes may improve over time, but never normalise. The clinical picture is generally more problematic during the first years of life when psychomotor retardation is complicated by failure to thrive, liver dysfunction, pericardial effusions, and stroke-like episodes. In addition, strabismus, lipocutaneous anomalies, and gluteal fat pads are always present, and muscular hypotonia and restricted joint mobility are common. Failure to thrive is common, with vomiting and diarrhoea and subsequent slow growth. Inflammation is a constant finding in the liver, and very common in the small bowel. Pancreatic function is also affected. Pericardial effusion has been reported in 50 per cent of the youngest children, requiring pericardectomy in 30 per cent of cases. Haemorrhaging and thromboembolic complications may occur, and the serum concentrations of several factors and inhibitors are low, particularly those of factors V and XI, protein C and antithrombin. Stroke-like episodes occur in about 30 per cent of cases, often following an infection, with coma lasting for hours to several days. Such sequelae as hemiplegia, blindness, and other focal neurological pathology have been observed transiently. Diagnosis is based on the serum carbohydrate-deficient transferrin level, verified by isoelectric focusing. Molecular genetic procedures enable point mutations to be identified and prenatal diagnosis to be performed in many families.
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PMID:[CDGS-1--a recently discovered hereditary metabolic disease. Multiple organ manifestations, incidence 1/80,000, difficult to treat]. 988 93

A 10-month old girl is described with a serum transferrin isoform abnormality of the same kind as in two previously reported girls with carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome type III. This patient presented with joint abnormalities and rapidly developing hypsarrhythmia, hypotonia, psychomotor delay and growth retardation. Fingers, toes, nails and local skin were dysmorphic. She had pale optic discs, thoracic syringomyelia and frontal lobe atrophy at three months. The CDT value in serum was greatly elevated. Several carbohydrate-deficient isoforms were found in transferrin (four), alpha1-antitrypsin (three), antithrombin (two) and thyroxine-binding globulin (four). Mutations in the CDGS 1-gene were excluded. The CDGS III glycoprotein abnormality most probably represents a distinct disorder of glycoprotein metabolism, and needs to be considered in unclear hypsarrhythmia with developmental delay. Dysmorphic features may be added to this syndrome.
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PMID:A neurodystrophic syndrome resembling carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome type III. 1040 91

Carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome (CDGS) is a newly delineated group of inherited multisystemic disorders associated with abnormal glycosylation of a number of serum glycoproteins. Several types have been described on the basis of clinical presentation and biochemical changes of the glycosylation of serum transferrin and attributed to different enzymatic defects; their clinical presentations are fully different and a clinical heterogeneity is observed within a same type of CDGS. Patients with CDGS type la usually present with neurologic (hypotonia, strabismus and cerebellar hypoplasia) and cutaneous (inverted nipples, abnormal distribution of adipose tissue) abnormalities, together with multivisceral involvement (digestive, hepatic, cardiac, renal). However, neurologic and cutaneous symptoms may be absent, so that CDGS must be looked for in case of unexplained organ failure such as isolated liver insufficiency, cardiomyopathy, pericarditis, tubulopathy, nephrotic syndrome, vascular accident or retinitis pigmentosa. Patients with CDGS type Ib present with liver disease, enteropathy and hypoglycemia without neurologic involvement. These patients are successfully treated with oral mannose administration emphasizing the importance of making the diagnosis. Patients with CDGS type Ic present with mild psychomotor retardation and seizures. Patients with CDGS type II have psychomotor retardation association with severe gastrointestinal disorder, dysmorphic features and abnormal electroretinogram. Other types (III, IV) are less clearly defined and the clinical presentation includes convulsive encephalopathy. Biological abnormalities such as mild hepatic cytolysis, hematologic and hormonal abnormalities are consistently observed in CDGS type I, as well as renal hyperechogeneity, leading one to look for this syndrome when they are associated. Until now, only four enzymatic deficiencies have been identified (types Ia, Ib, Ic, II).
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PMID:[Carbohydrate-deficient blood glycoprotein syndrome]. 1070 Oct 64

We report on 8 patients with a recently described novel subtype of congenital disorder of glycosylation type Ic (CDG-Ic). Their clinical presentation was mainly neurological with developmental retardation, muscular hypotonia, and epilepsy. Several symptoms commonly seen in CDG-Ia such as inverted nipples, abnormal fat distribution, and cerebellar hypoplasia were not observed. The clinical course is milder overall, with a better neurological outcome, than in CDG-Ia. The isoelectric focusing pattern of serum transferrin in CDG-Ia and CDG-Ic is indistinguishable. Interestingly, beta-trace protein in cerebrospinal fluid derived from immunoblot analysis of the brain showed a less pronounced hypoglycosylation pattern in CDG-Ic patients than in CDG-Ia patients. Analysis of lipid-linked oligosaccharides revealed an accumulation of Man9GlcNAc2 intermediates due to dolichol pyrophosphate-Man9GlcNAc2 alpha-1,3 glucosyltransferase deficiency. All patients were homozygous for an A333V mutation.
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PMID:Clinical and biochemical characteristics of congenital disorder of glycosylation type Ic, the first recognized endoplasmic reticulum defect in N-glycan synthesis. 1085 43

Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDGs) are a rapidly enlarging group of inherited diseases with abnormal N-glycosylation of glycoconjugates. Most patients have CDG-Ia, which is due to a phosphomannomutase (PMM) deficiency. In this article, we report that a significant portion (9 of 54) of patients with CDG-Ia had a rather high residual PMM activity in fibroblasts included in the normal range (means of the controls +/- 2 SD) and amounting to 35%-70% of the mean control value. The clinical diagnosis of CDG-Ia was made difficult by the fact that most (6 of 9) of these patients belong to a subgroup characterized by a phenotype that is milder than classical CDG-Ia. These patients lack some of the symptoms that are suggestive for the diagnosis, such as inverted nipples and abnormal fat deposition, and, as a mean, had higher residual PMM activities in fibroblasts (2.05+/-0.61 mU/mg protein, n=9; vs. controls 5.34+/-1.74 mU/mg protein, n=22), compared with patients with moderate (1.32+/-0.86 mU/mg protein, n=18) or severe (0.63+/-0.56 mU/mg protein, n=27, P<.001) cases. Yet they all showed mild mental retardation, hypotonia, cerebellar hypoplasia, and strabismus. All of them had an abnormal serum transferrin pattern and a significantly reduced PMM activity in leukocytes. Six of the nine patients with mild presentations were compound heterozygotes for the C241S mutation, which is known to reduce PMM activity by only approximately 2-fold. Our results indicate that intermediate PMM values in fibroblasts may mask the diagnosis of CDG-Ia, which is better accomplished by measurement of PMM activity in leukocytes and mutation search in the PMM2 gene. They also indicate that there is some degree of correlation between the residual activity in fibroblasts and the clinical phenotype.
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PMID:High residual activity of PMM2 in patients' fibroblasts: possible pitfall in the diagnosis of CDG-Ia (phosphomannomutase deficiency). 1115 36

A boy with an unspecific symptomatology consisting of mental retardation, strabismus, hypotonia and mild ataxia was diagnosed with a congenital disorder of glycosylation (CDG). Neither cerebellar atrophy nor dysmorphic features were present. The serum transferrin band pattern obtained by isoelectric focusing(IEF) showed a strongly elevated disialotransferrin band together with only slightly elevated asialotransferrin, thus a type I pattern. This is a new CDG classified CDG-x since CDG-la, -b, -c, -d and -e were excluded. Quantitative differences to the type 1 pattern of a CDG-la patient with a moderate to severe course were confirmed by densitometric evaluation of the gels and by SDS gel electrophoresis. Liver biopsy showed lysosomal inclusions suggesting a pre-Golgi defect. This patient's case supports the approach to include isoelectric focusing of serum transferrin in the diagnostic work-up of patients with unexplained symptoms.
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PMID:A new subtype of a congenital disorder of glycosylation (CDG) with mild clinical manifestations. 1187 May 87


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