Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038379 (strabismus)
9,317 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome is a newly described hereditary disorder which may be due to a defect in the glycoprotein metabolism. Predominant symptoms are mental retardation, epilepsy, cerebellar ataxia, polyneuropathy, squint, retinitis pigmentosa, retarded growth, hypothyroidism and liver steatosis. Increased serum glycoprotein-deficient transferrin is a marker of the disease and confirms the diagnosis. We describe four Norwegian children with this syndrome. Olivopontocerebellar degeneration was found upon examination of the brain in two patients who died.
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PMID:[The carbohydrate deficient glycoprotein syndrome]. 1044 Oct 90

A new group of recessively inherited metabolic disorders affecting glycoprotein metabolism has been identified--the carbohydrate-deficient-glycoprotein (CDG) syndromes. Here the course and clinical expression of CDG syndrome type I in 13 patients who have passed the age of 15 years are described. All presented with early onset psychomotor retardation, in most cases combined with slight facial dysmorphic features, some degree of hepatic dysfunction, and in one case, pericardial effusion. About half of the patients had subcutaneous lipodystrophy and comatose or stroke-like episodes during childhood. After the age of 15 the disease was mainly characterised by neurological symptoms consisting of non-progressive ataxia associated with cerebellar hypoplasia, stable mental retardation, variable peripheral neuropathy, and strabismus. One third of the patients had generalised seizures, usually sporadic, and all had retinal pigmentary degeneration. In all cases there was more or less pronounced thoracic deformity and no female had passed puberty. Also, the oldest female showed premature aging. Severe internal organ symptoms, which are common in pediatric patients, were absent. All patients had highly raised serum concentrations of the biochemical marker carbohydrate-deficient transferrin, which can be used to verify the diagnosis. It is concluded that after childhood, CDG syndrome type I is a largely non-progressive disease compatible with a socially functioning but dependent lifestyle.
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PMID:Carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome: clinical expression in adults with a new metabolic disease. 820 22

Carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome is characterized by mental retardation, ataxia, hepatopathy during infancy, cerebellar hypoplasia, peripheral neuropathy, internal strabismus, growth retardation and stroke-like episodes. Since the description of female siblings with unique clinical and biochemical features by Jaeken (1980) and the discovery of unique isoforms of serum transferrin in the patients by Jaeken (1984), more than 120 patients have been diagnosed. The biochemical marker is asialo- and disialo-transferrin. We have found the first Japanese patients and, through analysing serum glycoproteins from these patients, we was noted that multiple serum glycoproteins contain abnormal fractions, on isoelectric focusing. By analysing the sugar chain of transferrin, we have found that the abnormality is caused by a defect in the transfer of asparagine-N-linked oligosaccharide. Recently, two clinical and biochemical variants have been reported. One, characterized by severe mental retardation, no cerebellar hypoplasia, no peripheral neuropathy, diasirotransferrin dominancy, has proven to have a deficiency of N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase II, by Jaeken (1993).
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PMID:[Carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome]. 857 56

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

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

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

We report the clinical findings and the diagnostic work-up of a 17-month-old girl with CDG-x. Predominant clinical signs were, besides psychomotor retardation and truncal hypotonia, stereotyped dystonic hand movements and ophthalmological abnormalities such as optic atrophy, nystagmus and strabismus. Other symptoms that are often found in patients with CDG were not present, such as seizures, microcephaly, cerebellar hypoplasia, dysmorphic features, hepatointestinal disease, coagulopathy or multiorgan involvement. Isoelectric focusing (IEF) of the patient's serum showed a marked elevation of disialotransferrin, thus confirming an IEF type 1 pattern. A generalized glycosylation defect was confirmed also by IEF of a further glycoprotein (alpha1-antitrypsin), an increased carbohydrate deficient transferrin (CDT) serum concentration and an increased CDT/transferrin ratio. All known types of CDG-I, secondary glycosylation abnormalities and variants of amino acid sequence were excluded.
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PMID:A new case of CDG-x with stereotyped dystonic hand movements and optic atrophy. 1211 27

We present the case of an infant girl, born to first cousins, with a clinical phenotype consisting of microcephaly, hypotonia, strabismus and severe psychomotor retardation. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed global cerebellar atrophy involving the vermis and both hemispheres. The patient's serum transferrin levels were consistently unremarkable. Cerebellar biopsy, performed at 13 months of age, revealed heterotopic Purkinje cells in the molecular layer, but preservation of the external and internal granular layers. To our knowledge, this histological pattern of cerebellar cortical disorganization has not been described previously. The consanguinity of the parents suggests an autosomal recessive inheritance.
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PMID:Cerebellar hypoplasia with heterotopic purkinje cells in the molecular layer and preservation of the granule layers associated with severe encephalopathy. A new entity? 1291 Apr 42

Congenital Disorder of Glycosylation (CDG) type Ic is caused by mutations in ALG6. This gene encodes an alpha1,3 glucosyltransferase used for synthesis of the lipid linked oligosaccharide (LLO) precursor of the protein N-glycosylation pathway. CDG-Ic patients have moderate to severe psychomotor retardation, seizures, hypotonia, strabismus, and feeding difficulties. We previously identified a typical patient with a heterozygous point mutation, c.391T>C (p.Tyr131His) in ALG6. Using complementation analysis of ALG6-deficient yeast, we show that this alteration is as severe as the most common disease-causing mutation, c998C>T (p. Ala333Val), which occurs in over half of all known CDG-Ic patients. The frequency of c.391T>C (p.Tyr131His) in the US population, is 0.0214, suggesting that homozygotes would occur at a rate of& tilde;1:2,200. We identified one patient with typical CDG-Ic symptoms and a homozygous p.Tyr131His alteration in ALG6. However, in contrast to most CDG patients, her LLO and plasma transferrin glycosylation appeared normal. Thus, it is unclear whether c.391T>C causes CDG-Ic or contributes to the symptoms. Genotyping additional patients with CDG-like symptoms will be required to resolve this issue.
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PMID:Identification of a frequent variant in ALG6, the cause of Congenital Disorder of Glycosylation-Ic. 1451 65


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