Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0239946 (liver fibrosis)
8,268 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Phosphorylase kinase-deficient liver glycogenosis manifests in infancy with hepatomegaly, growth retardation, and elevated plasma aminotransferases and lipids. It can be caused by mutations in three different genes of phosphorylase kinase subunits: PHKA2, PHKB, and PHKG2. It is usually a benign condition, often with complete resolution of symptoms during puberty. A minority of patients displays a more severe phenotype with symptomatic fasting hypoglycemia and abnormal liver histology that may progress to cirrhosis. Three patients with liver cirrhosis in childhood analyzed previously all had PHKG2 mutations. This suggested that this genotype may generally cause a more severe clinical manifestation, but to date PHKG2 mutations have been identified in only seven patients. Here, we report mutation analysis in three new patients with liver phosphorylase kinase deficiency and recurrent hypoglycemia, liver fibrosis, and lack of glucagon response but no overt cirrhosis. In all three patients, PHKG2 mutations were found (H89fs[insC], E157K, D215N, W300X). Three of these mutations are novel, bringing the total number of distinct human PHKG2 mutations to 11, found in 10 patients. We conclude that liver phosphorylase kinase deficiency with a severe phenotype, with or without cirrhosis, is indeed often caused by PHKG2 mutations. These patients require active measures to maintain normoglycemia (raw cornstarch, nocturnal tube feeding), which may also alleviate growth retardation and the development of abnormal liver histology.
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PMID:Severe phenotype of phosphorylase kinase-deficient liver glycogenosis with mutations in the PHKG2 gene. 1293 Sep 17

Glycogen storage disease type IX (GSD IX) is a common form of glycogenosis due to mutations in PHKA1, PHKA2, or PHKB and PHKG2 genes resulting in the deficiency of phosphorylase kinase. The first two genes are X-linked while the latter two follow an autosomal recessive inheritance. The majority of cases of GSD IX are attributed to defects in PHKA2 which usually cause a mild disease. We report three patients with PHKG2-related GSD IX presenting with significant hepatic involvement, fibrosis, and cirrhosis. Interestingly, the homozygosity mapping resolved a dilemma about an erroneously normal phosphorylase kinase activity in patient 1. The novel mutation found in all the three patients (p.G220E) affects the catalytic subunit of the phosphorylase kinase. Increasing evidence shows that patients with PHKG2 mutations have a severe hepatic phenotype within the heterogeneous GSD IX disorder. Therefore, defect in PHKG2 should be considered in patients with suspected glycogenosis associated with significant liver fibrosis and cirrhosis.
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PMID:Novel PHKG2 mutation causing GSD IX with prominent liver disease: report of three cases and review of literature. 2432 80