Novel variants and clinical symptoms in four new ALG3-CDG patients, review of the literature, and identification of AAGRP-ALG3 as a novel ALG3 variant with alanine and glycine-rich N-terminus

  • Nastassja Himmelreich
  • Bianca Dimitrov
  • Virginia Geiger
  • Matthias Zielonka
  • Anna-Marlen Hutter
  • Lars Beedgen
  • Andreas Hüllen
  • Maximilian Breuer
  • Verena Peters
  • Kai-Christian Thiemann
  • Georg F Hoffmann
  • Irmgard Sinning
  • Thierry Dupré
  • Sandrine Vuillaumier-Barrot
  • Catherine Barrey
  • Jonas Denecke
  • Wolfgang Kölfen
  • Gesche Düker
  • Rainer Ganschow
  • Michael J Lentze
  • Stuart Moore
  • Nathalie Seta
  • Andreas Ziegler
  • Christian Thiel

Abstract

ALG3-CDG is one of the very rare types of congenital disorder of glycosylation (CDG) caused by variants in the ER-mannosyltransferase ALG3. Here, we summarize the clinical, biochemical, and genetic data of four new ALG3-CDG patients, who were identified by a type I pattern of serum transferrin and the accumulation of Man5 GlcNAc2 -PP-dolichol in LLO analysis. Additional clinical symptoms observed in our patients comprise sensorineural hearing loss, right-descending aorta, obstructive cardiomyopathy, macroglossia, and muscular hypertonia. We add four new biochemically confirmed variants to the list of ALG3-CDG inducing variants: c.350G>C (p.R117P), c.1263G>A (p.W421*), c.1037A>G (p.N346S), and the intron variant c.296+4A>G. Furthermore, in Patient 1 an additional open-reading frame of 141 bp (AAGRP) in the coding region of ALG3 was identified. Additionally, we show that control cells synthesize, to a minor degree, a hybrid protein composed of the polypeptide AAGRP and ALG3 (AAGRP-ALG3), while in Patient 1 expression of this hybrid protein is significantly increased due to the homozygous variant c.160_196del (g.165C>T). By reviewing the literature and combining our findings with previously published data, we further expand the knowledge of this rare glycosylation defect.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN1059-7794
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 07.2019
PubMed 31067009