Journal article
ALG1-CDG: Clinical and Molecular Characterization of 39 Unreported Patients
BG Ng, SA Shiryaev, D Rymen, EA Eklund, K Raymond, M Kircher, JE Abdenur, F Alehan, AT Midro, MJ Bamshad, R Barone, GT Berry, JE Brumbaugh, KJ Buckingham, K Clarkson, FS Cole, S O'Connor, GM Cooper, R Van Coster, LA Demmer Show all
Human Mutation | WILEY | Published : 2016
DOI: 10.1002/humu.22983
Open access
Abstract
Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) arise from pathogenic mutations in over 100 genes leading to impaired protein or lipid glycosylation. ALG1 encodes a β1,4 mannosyltransferase that catalyzes the addition of the first of nine mannose moieties to form a dolichol-lipid linked oligosaccharide intermediate required for proper N-linked glycosylation. ALG1 mutations cause a rare autosomal recessive disorder termed ALG1-CDG. To date 13 mutations in 18 patients from 14 families have been described with varying degrees of clinical severity. We identified and characterized 39 previously unreported cases of ALG1-CDG from 32 families and add 26 new mutations. Pathogenicity of each mutation was ..
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Awarded by National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
Funding Acknowledgements
Contract grant sponsors: The Rocket Fund; National Institutes of Health (NIH) (R01DK099551, R01DK55615); National Human Genome Research Institute; National Heart Lung Blood Institute (1U54HG006493); NIGMS (GM102129) ERA-Net for Research Programs on Rare Diseases Joint Transnational Call 2011 (EURO-CDG) (ERARE11-135).