Congenital disorders of glycosylation: CDG-I, CDG-II, and beyond

HH Freeze - Current molecular medicine, 2007 - ingentaconnect.com
Current molecular medicine, 2007ingentaconnect.com
The Congenital Disorders of Glycosylation (CDG) are a collection of over 20 inherited
diseases that impair protein N-glycosylation. The clinical appearance of CDG patients is
quite diverse making it difficult for physicians to recognize them. A simple blood test of
transferrin glycosylation status signals a glycosylation abnormality, but not the specific
defect. An abnormal trasferrin glycosylation pattern suggests that the defect is in either
genes that synthesize and add the precursor glycan (Glc3Man9GlcNAc2) to proteins (Type I) …
The Congenital Disorders of Glycosylation (CDG) are a collection of over 20 inherited diseases that impair protein N-glycosylation. The clinical appearance of CDG patients is quite diverse making it difficult for physicians to recognize them. A simple blood test of transferrin glycosylation status signals a glycosylation abnormality, but not the specific defect. An abnormal trasferrin glycosylation pattern suggests that the defect is in either genes that synthesize and add the precursor glycan (Glc3Man9GlcNAc2) to proteins (Type I) or genes that process the protein-bound N-glycans (Type II). Type I defects create unoccupied glycosylation sites, while Type II defects give fully occupied sites with abnormally processed glycans. These types are expected to be mutually exclusive, but a group of patients is now emerging who have variable coagulopathy and hypoglycemia together with a combination of Type I and Type II transferrin features. This surprising finding makes identifying their defects more challenging, but the defects and associated clinical manifestations of these patients suggest that the N-glycosylation pathway has some secrets left to share.
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