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1.
Biochimie ; 186: 28-32, 2021 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33857563

ABSTRACT

Glycogen storage disease type IV (GSD IV) is caused by mutations in the glycogen branching enzyme gene (GBE1) that lead to the accumulation of aberrant glycogen in affected tissues, mostly in the liver. To determine whether dysfunctional glycogen metabolism in GSD IV affects other components of cellular bioenergetics, we studied mitochondrial function in heterozygous Gbe1 knockout (Gbe1+/-) mice. Mitochondria isolated from the livers of Gbe1+/- mice showed elevated respiratory complex I activity and increased reactive oxygen species production, particularly by respiratory chain complex III. These observations indicate that GBE1 deficiency leads to broader rearrangements in energy metabolism and that the mechanisms underlying GSD IV pathogenesis may include more than merely mechanical cell damage caused by the presence of glycogen aggregates.


Subject(s)
Electron Transport Complex III/metabolism , Glycogen Debranching Enzyme System/deficiency , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Mitochondria, Liver/enzymology , Mitochondrial Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Electron Transport Complex III/genetics , Glycogen Debranching Enzyme System/metabolism , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/pathology , Mice , Mice, Knockout , Mitochondria, Liver/genetics , Mitochondria, Liver/pathology , Mitochondrial Proteins/genetics
2.
Clin Dysmorphol ; 28(1): 17-21, 2019 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30303820

ABSTRACT

Glycogen storage disease IV (GSD IV), caused by a defect in GBE1, is a clinically heterogeneous disorder. A classical hepatic form and a neuromuscular form have been described. The severe neuromuscular form presents as a fetal akinesia deformation sequence or a congenital subtype. We ascertained three unrelated families with fetuses/neonates who presented with fetal akinesia deformation sequence to our clinic for genetic counseling. We performed a detailed clinical evaluation, exome sequencing, and histopathology examination of two fetuses and two neonates from three unrelated families presenting with these perinatally lethal neuromuscular forms of GSD IV. Exome sequencing in the affected fetuses/neonates identified four novel pathogenic variants (c.1459G>T, c.144-1G>A, c.1680C>G, and c.1843G>C) in GBE1 (NM_000158). Histopathology examination of tissues from the affected fetuses/neonate was consistent with the diagnosis. Here, we add three more families with the severe perinatally lethal neuromuscular forms of GSD IV to the GBE1 mutation spectrum.


Subject(s)
Arthrogryposis/enzymology , Arthrogryposis/genetics , Glycogen Debranching Enzyme System/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Mutation/genetics , Neuromuscular Diseases/enzymology , Neuromuscular Diseases/genetics , Arthrogryposis/pathology , Base Sequence , Female , Fetus/pathology , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/pathology , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Male , Neuromuscular Diseases/pathology , Pedigree
4.
Hum Pathol ; 54: 152-6, 2016 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27107456

ABSTRACT

Glycogen storage disease type IV is an autosomal recessive disorder of carbohydrates caused by deficiency of amylo-1-4-glycanoglycosyltransferase, which leads to accumulation of amylopectin-like polysaccharides in tissues including liver, heart and neuromuscular system. More than 40 different mutations in the glycogen branching enzyme gene (GBE1) have been described. In this study, we report a 2-year-old boy who presented with developmental delay and muscle weakness. He subsequently was diagnosed with glycogen storage disease type IV based on a liver biopsy histology and electron microscopy. Glycogen branching enzyme activity was in the low range. Genetic analysis demonstrated a novel heterozygous variant (c.760A>G; p.Thr254Ala) in exon 6 of the GBE1 gene, which is believed to be pathogenic. This variant was inherited from the patient's mother who was asymptomatic with normal glycogen branching enzyme activity. Whole-exome sequencing failed to reveal additional variations in the GBE1 gene.


Subject(s)
Genetic Variation , Glycogen Debranching Enzyme System/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Biopsy , Child, Preschool , Exons , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Glycogen Debranching Enzyme System/deficiency , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/diagnosis , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Heredity , Heterozygote , Humans , Liver/enzymology , Liver/ultrastructure , Male , Microscopy, Electron , Molecular Diagnostic Techniques , Pedigree , Phenotype
5.
Hum Mol Genet ; 24(20): 5667-76, 2015 Oct 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26199317

ABSTRACT

Glycogen branching enzyme 1 (GBE1) plays an essential role in glycogen biosynthesis by generating α-1,6-glucosidic branches from α-1,4-linked glucose chains, to increase solubility of the glycogen polymer. Mutations in the GBE1 gene lead to the heterogeneous early-onset glycogen storage disorder type IV (GSDIV) or the late-onset adult polyglucosan body disease (APBD). To better understand this essential enzyme, we crystallized human GBE1 in the apo form, and in complex with a tetra- or hepta-saccharide. The GBE1 structure reveals a conserved amylase core that houses the active centre for the branching reaction and harbours almost all GSDIV and APBD mutations. A non-catalytic binding cleft, proximal to the site of the common APBD mutation p.Y329S, was found to bind the tetra- and hepta-saccharides and may represent a higher-affinity site employed to anchor the complex glycogen substrate for the branching reaction. Expression of recombinant GBE1-p.Y329S resulted in drastically reduced protein yield and solubility compared with wild type, suggesting this disease allele causes protein misfolding and may be amenable to small molecule stabilization. To explore this, we generated a structural model of GBE1-p.Y329S and designed peptides ab initio to stabilize the mutation. As proof-of-principle, we evaluated treatment of one tetra-peptide, Leu-Thr-Lys-Glu, in APBD patient cells. We demonstrate intracellular transport of this peptide, its binding and stabilization of GBE1-p.Y329S, and 2-fold increased mutant enzymatic activity compared with untreated patient cells. Together, our data provide the rationale and starting point for the screening of small molecule chaperones, which could become novel therapies for this disease.


Subject(s)
Glycogen Debranching Enzyme System/chemistry , Glycogen Debranching Enzyme System/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Glycogen Storage Disease/enzymology , Mutation, Missense , Nervous System Diseases/enzymology , Peptides/therapeutic use , Amino Acid Sequence , Computational Biology , Glycogen Debranching Enzyme System/drug effects , Glycogen Debranching Enzyme System/metabolism , Glycogen Storage Disease/drug therapy , Glycogen Storage Disease/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data , Nervous System Diseases/drug therapy , Nervous System Diseases/genetics , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Sequence Alignment
6.
JAMA Neurol ; 71(1): 41-7, 2014 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24248152

ABSTRACT

IMPORTANCE: The neuromuscular presentation of glycogen branching enzyme deficiency includes a severe infantile form and a late-onset variant known as adult polyglucosan body disease. Herein, we describe 2 patients with adult acute onset of fluctuating neurological signs and brain magnetic resonance imaging lesions simulating multiple sclerosis. A better definition of this new clinical entity is needed to facilitate diagnosis. OBJECTIVES: To describe the clinical presentation and progression of a new intermediate variant of glycogen branching enzyme deficiency and to discuss genotype-phenotype correlations. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Clinical, biochemical, morphological, and molecular study of 2 patients followed up for 6 years and 8 years at academic medical centers. The participants were 2 patients of non-Ashkenazi descent with adult acute onset of neurological signs initially diagnosed as multiple sclerosis. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Clinical course, muscle and nerve morphology, longitudinal study of brain magnetic resonance imaging, and glycogen branching enzyme activity and GBE1 molecular analysis. RESULTS: Molecular analysis showed that one patient was homozygous (c.1544G>A) and the other patient was compound heterozygous (c.1544G>A and c.1961-1962delCA) for GBE1 mutations. Residual glycogen branching enzyme activity was 16% and 30% of normal in leukocytes. Both patients manifested acute episodes of transient neurological symptoms, and neurological impairment was mild at age 45 years and 53 years. Brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed nonprogressive white matter lesions and spinocerebellar atrophy similar to typical adult polyglucosan body disease. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: GBE1 mutations can cause an early adult-onset relapsing-remitting form of polyglucosan body disease distinct from adult polyglucosan body disease in several ways, including younger age at onset, history of infantile liver involvement, and subacute and remitting course simulating multiple sclerosis. This should orient neurologists toward the correct diagnosis.


Subject(s)
Glycogen Debranching Enzyme System/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/pathology , Acute Disease , Age of Onset , Disease Progression , Female , Follow-Up Studies , Genetic Carrier Screening , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Homozygote , Humans , Leukoencephalopathies/diagnosis , Leukoencephalopathies/genetics , Leukoencephalopathies/pathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Middle Aged , Spinocerebellar Ataxias/diagnosis , Spinocerebellar Ataxias/genetics , Spinocerebellar Ataxias/pathology
7.
Semin Liver Dis ; 31(2): 223-9, 2011 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21538287

ABSTRACT

Liver involvement in genetic and metabolic disorders may result in intrahepatic accumulation of specific precursors or byproducts, which have distinctive features on light microscopy. The "polyglucosan disorders" are diseases in which polyglucosan (abnormal glycogen with decreased branching) is formed and deposited in various tissues because of decreased or absent glycogen branching enzyme activity. These disorders include Lafora disease (myoclonus epilepsy) and type IV glycogen storage disease. Polyglucosan deposits in both conditions result in ground-glass hepatocellular inclusions resembling those seen in chronic hepatitis B virus infection. In the present report, we describe a case of the rare, adulthood form of glycogen branching enzyme deficiency, adult polyglucosan body disease (APBD), in which abnormal serum liver tests prompted a liver biopsy. The pathologic findings of periportal ground-glass hepatocellular inclusions, mild chronic portal inflammation, and periportal fibrosis are not well described in APBD, but resemble the chronic changes that have been reported in Lafora disease. The differential diagnosis of ground-glass hepatocytes and the genetic basis of APBD are discussed.


Subject(s)
1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/genetics , Glucans/metabolism , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/diagnosis , Hepatitis/genetics , Hepatocytes/pathology , Inclusion Bodies/pathology , Liver Cirrhosis/genetics , 1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/deficiency , Biopsy , Chronic Disease , Diagnosis, Differential , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/complications , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/pathology , Hepatitis/enzymology , Hepatitis/pathology , Hepatocytes/metabolism , Humans , Inclusion Bodies/metabolism , Liver Cirrhosis/enzymology , Liver Cirrhosis/pathology , Liver Function Tests , Male , Middle Aged , Predictive Value of Tests
8.
Neuromuscul Disord ; 20(12): 783-90, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20833045

ABSTRACT

The fatal infantile neuromuscular presentation of branching enzyme deficiency (glycogen storage disease type IV) due to mutations in the gene encoding the glycogen branching enzyme, is a rare but probably underdiagnosed cause of congenital hypotonia. We report an infant girl with severe generalized hypotonia, born at 33 weeks gestation who required ventilatory assistance since birth. She had bilateral ptosis, mild knee and foot contractures and echocardiographic evidence of cardiomyopathy. A muscle biopsy at 1 month of age showed typical polyglucosan storage. The autopsy at 3.5 months of age showed frontal cortex polymicrogyria and polyglucosan bodies in neurons of basal ganglia, thalamus, substantia innominata, brain stem, and myenteric plexus, as well as liver involvement. Glycogen branching enzyme activity in muscle was virtually undetectable. Sequencing of the GBE1 gene revealed a homozygous 28 base pair deletion and a single base insertion at the same site in exon 5. This case confirms previous observations that GBE deficiency ought to be included in the differential diagnosis of congenital hypotonia and that the phenotype correlates with the 'molecular severity' of the mutation.


Subject(s)
1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/pathology , Muscle Hypotonia/pathology , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Brain/pathology , Fatal Outcome , Female , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Infant, Premature , Muscle Hypotonia/congenital , Muscle Hypotonia/enzymology , Muscle Hypotonia/genetics , Muscle, Skeletal/enzymology
9.
J Inherit Metab Dis ; 33 Suppl 3: S83-90, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20058079

ABSTRACT

Glycogen storage disease type IV (GSD IV; Andersen disease) is caused by a deficiency of glycogen branching enzyme (GBE), leading to excessive deposition of structurally abnormal, amylopectin-like glycogen in affected tissues. The accumulated glycogen lacks multiple branch points and thus has longer outer branches and poor solubility, causing irreversible tissue and organ damage. Although classic GSD IV presents with early onset of hepatosplenomegaly with progressive liver cirrhosis, GSD IV exhibits extensive clinical heterogeneity with respect to age at onset and variability in pattern and extent of organ and tissue involvement. With the advent of cloning and determination of the genomic structure of the human GBE gene (GBE1), molecular analysis and characterization of underlying disease-causing mutations is now possible. A variety of disease-causing mutations have been identified in the GBE1 gene in GSD IV patients, many of whom presented with diverse clinical phenotypes. Detailed biochemical and genetic analyses of three unrelated patients suspected to have GSD IV are presented here. Two novel missense mutations (p.Met495Thr and p.Pro552Leu) and a novel 1-bp deletion mutation (c.1999delA) were identified. A variety of mutations in GBE1 have been previously reported, including missense and nonsense mutations, nucleotide deletions and insertions, and donor and acceptor splice-site mutations. Mutation analysis is useful in confirming the diagnosis of GSD IV--especially when higher residual GBE enzyme activity levels are seen and enzyme analysis is not definitive--and allows for further determination of potential genotype/phenotype correlations in this disease.


Subject(s)
Glycogen Debranching Enzyme System/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Mutation, Missense , Sequence Deletion , Amino Acid Sequence , Base Sequence , DNA Mutational Analysis , Female , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Genetic Testing/methods , Glycogen Debranching Enzyme System/metabolism , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/complications , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/diagnosis , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Humans , Infant , Male , Molecular Sequence Data , Pedigree , Phenotype , Prognosis , Severity of Illness Index
10.
J Inherit Metab Dis ; 32 Suppl 1: S161-8, 2009 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19357989

ABSTRACT

Glycogen storage disease type IV (GSD IV, or Andersen disease) is an autosomal recessive disorder due to the deficiency of 1,4-alpha-glucan branching enzyme (or glycogen branching enzyme, GBE1), resulting in an accumulation of amylopectin-like polysaccharide in muscle, liver, heart and central and peripheral nervous system. Typically, the presentation is in childhood with liver involvement up to cirrhosis. The neuromuscular form varies in onset (congenital, perinatal, juvenile and adult) and in severity. Congenital cases are rare, and fewer than 20 cases have been described and genetically determined so far. This form is characterized by polyhydramnios, neonatal hypotonia, and neuronal involvement; hepatopathy is uncommon, and the babies usually die between 4 weeks and 4 months of age. We report the case of an infant who presented severe hypotonia, dilatative cardiomyopathy, mild hepatopathy, and brain lateral ventricle haemorrhage, features consistent with the congenital form of GSD IV. He died at one month of life of cardiorespiratory failure. Muscle biopsy and heart and liver autoptic specimens showed many vacuoles filled with PAS-positive diastase-resistant materials. Electron-microscopic analysis showed mainly polyglucosan accumulations in all the tissues examined. Postmortem examination showed the presence of vacuolated neurons containing this abnormal polysaccharide. GBE1 biochemical activity was virtually absent in muscle and fibroblasts, and totally lacking in liver and heart as well as glycogen synthase activity. GBE1 gene sequence analysis revealed a novel homozygous nonsense mutation, p.E152X, in exon 4, correlating with the lack of enzyme activity and with the severe neonatal involvement. Our findings contribute to increasing the spectrum of mutation associated with congenital GSD IV.


Subject(s)
Codon, Nonsense , Glycogen Debranching Enzyme System/deficiency , Glycogen Debranching Enzyme System/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/diagnosis , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Base Sequence , Brain/enzymology , Brain/pathology , DNA Mutational Analysis , Fatal Outcome , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Homozygote , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Liver/enzymology , Liver/pathology , Male , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Myocardium/enzymology , Myocardium/pathology
11.
Mol Genet Metab ; 95(1-2): 52-8, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18691923

ABSTRACT

We describe a 15-year-old boy and his 19-year-old sister with progressive dilated cardiomyopathy and mild non-progressive proximal lower limb myopathy, secondary to the accumulation of amylopectin-like fibrillar glycogen, (polyglucosan) bodies, in heart and skeletal muscle. Evidence of idiopathic amylopectinosis or polysaccharidosis was demonstrated in heart and skeletal muscle tissue by histology, electron microscopy, biochemical, and genetic analysis. In both siblings the heart muscle stored PAS-positive, proteinase-k resistant and partly diastase resistant granulo-filamentous material, simulating polyglucosan bodies. Glycogen branching enzyme activity, and phosphofructokinase enzyme activity, measured in skeletal muscle tissue and explanted heart tissue were all within the normal limits, however glycogen content was elevated. Furthermore, GBE1, PRKAG2, desmin, alphabeta-crystallin, ZASP, myotilin, and LAMP-2 gene sequencing revealed no mutation, excluding e.g. glycogen storage disease type 4 and desmin-related myofibrillar cardiomyopathies. In both patients the diagnosis of an idiopathic polysaccharidosis with progressive dilated cardiomyopathy was made, requiring heart transplantation at age 13 and 14, respectively. Both patients belong to an autosomal recessive group of biochemically and genetically unclassified severe vacuolar glycogen storage disease of the heart and skeletal muscle. Up to now unidentified glycogen synthesis or glycogen degradation pathways are supposed to contribute to this idiopathic glycogen storage disease.


Subject(s)
Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/diagnosis , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Myocardium/metabolism , Adolescent , Adult , Female , Germany , Glycogen/metabolism , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/metabolism , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/pathology , Humans , Male , Muscle, Skeletal/enzymology , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Myocardium/enzymology , Myocardium/pathology , Pedigree , Siblings
12.
Acta Neuropathol ; 116(5): 491-506, 2008 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18661138

ABSTRACT

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.


Subject(s)
1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/genetics , Glucans/metabolism , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Mutation , 1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/metabolism , Female , Glucans/ultrastructure , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/pathology , Humans , Inclusion Bodies/metabolism , Inclusion Bodies/ultrastructure , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Male , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Muscle, Skeletal/ultrastructure , Pregnancy , Spinal Cord/metabolism , Spinal Cord/ultrastructure , Sural Nerve/metabolism , Sural Nerve/ultrastructure
13.
J Inherit Metab Dis ; 31 Suppl 2: S255-9, 2008 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18392749

ABSTRACT

We report a 13-year-old boy with multisystem involvement secondary to accumulation of amylopectin-like material. He was born to consanguineous parents at full term without any complications and his maternal perinatal history was uneventful. His parents were cousins. He had normal growth and development except for his weight. His sister died from an unexplained cardiomyopathy at the age of 8 years. Our patient's initial symptom was severe heart failure. Since he also had a complaint of muscle weakness, electromyography was performed which showed muscle involvement. The diagnosis was suggested by tissue biopsy of skeletal muscle showing intracellular, basophilic, diastase-resistant, periodic acid-Schiff-positive inclusion bodies and was confirmed by the presence of a completed branching enzyme deficiency. Similar intracytoplasmic inclusion-like bodies were also found in liver biopsy, but very few in number compared with the skeletal muscle. The patient died from an intercurrent infection. Postmortem endomyocardial biopsy revealed the same intracytoplasmic inclusions as described above affecting almost all myocardial cells. Ultrastructural examination of liver biopsy was nondiagnostic; however, myocardium showed prominent, large, intracytoplasmic deposits. Glycogen branching enzyme gene sequence was normal, and thus classical branching enzyme deficiency was excluded. Our patient represents the first molecular study performed on a patient in whom there was multiple system involvement secondary to accumulation of amylopectin-like material. We suggest that this is an as yet undefined and different phenotype of glycogen storage disease associated with multisystemic involvement.


Subject(s)
1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/deficiency , Amylopectin/biosynthesis , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/complications , Inclusion Bodies/enzymology , Liver/enzymology , Muscle, Skeletal/enzymology , Myocardium/enzymology , 1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/genetics , Adolescent , Autopsy , Biopsy , Electromyography , Fatal Outcome , Genotype , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/diagnosis , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/pathology , Heart Failure/enzymology , Heart Failure/etiology , Humans , Inclusion Bodies/pathology , Liver/pathology , Male , Muscle Weakness/enzymology , Muscle Weakness/etiology , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Myocardium/pathology , Phenotype , Up-Regulation
14.
Acta Myol ; 26(1): 75-8, 2007 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17915577

ABSTRACT

Deficiency of glycogen branching enzyme is causative of Glycogen Storage Disease type IV (GSD-IV), a rare autosomal recessive disorder of the glycogen synthesis, characterized by the accumulation of amylopectin-like polysaccharide, also known as polyglucosan, in almost all tissues. Its clinical presentation is variable and involves the liver or the neuromuscular system and different mutations in the GBE1 gene, located on chromosome 3, have been identified in both phenotypes. This review will addresses the neuromuscular clinical variants, focusing on the molecular genetics aspects of this disorder.


Subject(s)
1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/deficiency , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Neuromuscular Diseases/enzymology , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Amino Acid Substitution , Animals , Chromosomes, Human, Pair 3 , Disease Models, Animal , Genotype , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Humans , Mutation , Neuromuscular Diseases/genetics
15.
J Inherit Metab Dis ; 30(5): 722-34, 2007 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17705025

ABSTRACT

Deficiency of liver glycogen phosphorylase in glycogen storage disease (GSD) type VI results in a reduced ability to mobilize glucose from glycogen. Six mutations of the PYGL gene, which encodes the liver isoform of the enzyme, have been identified in the literature. We have characterized eight patients from seven families with GSD type VI and identified 11 novel PYGL gene defects. The majority of the mutations were missense, resulting in the substitution of highly conserved residues. These could be grouped into those that were predicted to affect substrate binding (p.V456M, p.E673K, p.S675L, p.S675T), pyridoxal phosphate binding (p.R491C, p.K681T), or activation of glycogen phosphorylase (p.Q13P) or that had an unknown effect (p.N632I and p.D634H). Two mutations were predicted to result in null alleles, p.R399X and [c.1964_1969inv6;c.1969+1_+4delGTAC]. Only 7 of the 23 (30%) reported PYGL alleles carry nonsense, splice site or frameshift mutations compared to 68-80% of affected alleles of the highly homologous muscle glycogen phosphorylase gene, PYGM, that underlie McArdle disease. There was heterogeneity in the clinical symptoms observed in affected individuals. These varied from hepatomegaly and subclinical hypoglycaemia, to severe hepatomegaly with recurrent severe hypoglycaemia and postprandial lactic acidosis. We conclude that deficiency of liver glycogen phosphorylase is predominantly the result of missense mutations affecting enzyme activity. There are no common mutations and the severity of clinical symptoms varies significantly.


Subject(s)
Glycogen Phosphorylase, Liver Form/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Liver/enzymology , Mutation, Missense , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Blood Glucose/metabolism , Child, Preschool , DNA Mutational Analysis , Exons , Female , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Genotype , Glycogen Phosphorylase, Liver Form/chemistry , Glycogen Phosphorylase, Liver Form/deficiency , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Humans , Infant , Introns , Lactic Acid/blood , Male , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Pedigree , Phenotype , Protein Conformation , Sequence Alignment , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Severity of Illness Index
16.
J Vet Intern Med ; 20(5): 1207-11, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17063718

ABSTRACT

Glycogen Branching Enzyme Deficiency (GBED), a fatal condition recently identified in fetuses and neonatal foals of the Quarter Horse and Paint Horse lineages, is caused by a nonsense mutation in codon 34 of the GBE1 gene, which prevents the synthesis of a functional GBE protein and severely disrupts glycogen metabolism. The aims of this project were to determine the mutant GBE1 allele frequency in random samples from the major relevant horse breeds, as well as the frequency with which GBED is associated with abortion and early neonatal death using the tissue archives from veterinary diagnostic laboratories. The mutant GBE1 allele frequency in registered Quarter Horse, Paint Horse, and Thoroughbred populations was 0.041, 0.036, and 0.000, respectively. Approximately 2.5% of fetal and early neonatal deaths in Quarter Horse-related breeds submitted to 2 different US diagnostic laboratories were homozygous for the mutant GBE1 allele, with the majority of these being abortions. Retrospective histopathology of the homozygotes detected periodic acid Schiff's (PAS)-positive inclusions in the cardiac or skeletal muscle, which is characteristic of GBED, in 8 out of the 9 cases. Pedigree and genotype analyses supported the hypothesis that GBED is inherited as a simple recessive trait from a single founder. The frequency with which GBED is associated with abortion and neonatal mortality in Quarter Horse-related breeds makes the DNA-based test valuable in determining specific diagnoses and designing matings that avoid conception of a GBED foal.


Subject(s)
1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/deficiency , Alleles , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/veterinary , Horse Diseases/enzymology , Horse Diseases/genetics , 1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/genetics , Abortion, Veterinary/enzymology , Abortion, Veterinary/genetics , Abortion, Veterinary/pathology , Animals , Animals, Newborn , DNA/chemistry , DNA/genetics , Female , Genotype , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/pathology , Histocytochemistry/veterinary , Horse Diseases/pathology , Horses , Muscle, Skeletal/pathology , Myocardium/pathology , Pedigree , Polymerase Chain Reaction/veterinary , Pregnancy , Retrospective Studies
17.
Am J Med Genet A ; 139A(2): 118-22, 2005 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16278887

ABSTRACT

We report on a family of three consecutive fetuses affected by type IV glycogen storage disease (GSD IV). In all cases, cervical cystic hygroma was observed on the 12-week-ultrasound examination. During the second trimester, fetal hydrops developed in the first pregnancy whereas fetal akinesia appeared in the second pregnancy. The diagnosis was suggested by microscopic examination of fetal tissues showing characteristic inclusions exclusively in striated fibers, then confirmed by enzymatic studies on frozen muscle. Antenatal diagnosis was performed on the third and fourth pregnancies: cervical cystic hygroma and low glycogen branching enzyme (GBE) activity on chorionic villi sample (CVS) were detected in the third pregnancy whereas ultrasound findings were normal and GBE activity within normal range on CVS in the fourth pregnancy. Molecular analysis showed that the mother was heterozygous for a c.1471G > C mutation in exon 12, leading to the replacement of an alanine by a tyrosine at codon 491 (p.A491T); the father was heterozygous for a c.895G > T mutation in exon 7, leading to the creation of a stop codon at position 299 (p.G299X). GSD IV has to be considered in a context of cervical cystic hygroma with normal karyotype, particularly when second trimester hydrops or akinesia develop. Enzymatic analysis of GBE must be performed on CVS or amniotic cells to confirm the diagnosis. Characteristic intracellular inclusions are specific to the disease and should be recognized, even in macerated tissues after fetal death. Genetic analysis of the GBE gene may help to shed some light on the puzzling diversity of GSD IV phenotypes.


Subject(s)
Fetal Diseases/physiopathology , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/physiopathology , Adult , Female , Fetal Death , Fetal Diseases/enzymology , Fetal Diseases/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Humans , Male , Pregnancy
18.
Muscle Nerve ; 32(5): 675-81, 2005 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16007674

ABSTRACT

A 62-year-old man developed progressive gait instability, bladder dysfunction, proximal weakness, distal sensory loss, and mild cognitive impairment over 6 years. Neurologic examination revealed upper and lower motor neuron dysfunction in the lower extremities, with distal sensory loss. Electrodiagnostic studies, magnetic resonance imaging of the brain, and sural nerve biopsy were consistent with adult polyglucosan body disease. Biochemical and genetic analyses demonstrated reduced glycogen brancher enzyme levels associated with a heterozygous point mutation (Tyr329Ser or Y329S) in the glycogen brancher enzyme gene on chromosome 3. Mutational heterozygosity in the glycogen brancher enzyme gene has not been previously reported as a cause for this rare disease. A review of the clinical presentation, pathogenesis, etiology, and diagnosis of this disease is presented.


Subject(s)
1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/deficiency , Brain/pathology , Glucans/metabolism , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/diagnosis , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Inclusion Bodies , 1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/genetics , Aged , Base Sequence , Chromosomes, Human, Pair 3 , Diagnosis, Differential , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/complications , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/pathology , Heterozygote , Humans , Jews , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Male , Molecular Sequence Data , Point Mutation
19.
Pediatr Transplant ; 9(2): 261-5, 2005 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15787805

ABSTRACT

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.


Subject(s)
1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/metabolism , Cardiomyopathies/surgery , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/surgery , Amylopectin/metabolism , Cardiomyopathies/enzymology , Cardiomyopathies/genetics , Cardiomyopathies/pathology , Electrocardiography , Female , Fibroblasts/enzymology , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/pathology , Humans , Infant , Ventricular Dysfunction, Left/etiology
20.
Neurology ; 63(6): 1053-8, 2004 Sep 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15452297

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Glycogen storage disease type IV (GSD-IV) is a clinically heterogeneous autosomal recessive disorder due to glycogen branching enzyme (GBE) deficiency and resulting in the accumulation of an amylopectin-like polysaccharide. The typical presentation is liver disease of childhood, progressing to lethal cirrhosis. The neuromuscular form of GSD-IV varies in onset (perinatal, congenital, juvenile, or adult) and severity. OBJECTIVE: To identify the molecular bases of different neuromuscular forms of GSD-IV and to establish possible genotype/phenotype correlations. METHODS: Eight patients with GBE deficiency had different neuromuscular presentations: three had fetal akinesia deformation sequence (FADS), three had congenital myopathy, one had juvenile myopathy, and one had combined myopathic and hepatic features. In all patients, the promoter and the entire coding region of the GBE gene at the RNA and genomic level were sequenced. RESULTS: Nine novel mutations were identified, including nonsense, missense, deletion, insertion, and splice-junction mutations. The three cases with FADS were homozygous, whereas all other cases were compound heterozygotes. CONCLUSIONS: This study expands the spectrum of mutations in the GBE gene and confirms that the neuromuscular presentation of GSD-IV is clinically and genetically heterogeneous.


Subject(s)
1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/genetics , Genetic Heterogeneity , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/genetics , Mutation , 1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/chemistry , 1,4-alpha-Glucan Branching Enzyme/deficiency , Adult , Age of Onset , Amino Acid Substitution , Cells, Cultured/enzymology , Child , Child, Preschool , Consanguinity , DNA/genetics , DNA Mutational Analysis , Erythrocytes/enzymology , Fatal Outcome , Fibroblasts/enzymology , Genotype , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/enzymology , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/epidemiology , Glycogen Storage Disease Type IV/pathology , Humans , Hydrogen Bonding , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Liver/pathology , Models, Molecular , Muscles/enzymology , Muscles/pathology , Phenotype , Protein Conformation , RNA Splice Sites/genetics , Sequence Deletion
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