Pompe disease in a Brazilian series: clinical and molecular analyses with identification of nine new mutations.

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Citation

Oba-Shinjo SM, da Silva R, Andrade FG, Palmer RE, Pomponio RJ, Ciociola KM, S Carvalho M, Gutierrez PS, Porta G, Marrone CD, Munoz V, Grzesiuk AK, Llerena JC Jr, Berditchevsky CR, Sobreira C, Horovitz D, Hatem TP, Frota ER, Pecchini R, Kouyoumdjian JA, Werneck L, Amado VM, Camelo JS Jr, Mattaliano RJ, Marie SK

Pompe disease in a Brazilian series: clinical and molecular analyses with identification of nine new mutations.

J Neurol. 2009 Nov;256(11):1881-90. doi: 10.1007/s00415-009-5219-y. Epub 2009 Jul 9.

PubMed ID
19588081 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Pompe disease (glycogen storage disease type II or acid maltase deficiency) is an inherited autosomal recessive deficiency of acid alpha-glucosidase (GAA), with predominant manifestations of skeletal muscle weakness. A broad range of studies have been published focusing on Pompe patients from different countries, but none from Brazil. We investigated 41 patients with either infantile-onset (21 cases) or late-onset (20 cases) disease by muscle pathology, enzyme activity and GAA gene mutation screening. Molecular analyses identified 71 mutant alleles from the probands, nine of which are novel (five missense mutations c.136T > G, c.650C > T, c.1456G > C, c.1834C > T, and c.1905C > A, a splice-site mutation c.1195-2A > G, two deletions c.18_25del and c.2185delC, and one nonsense mutation c.643G > T). Interestingly, the c.1905C > A variant was detected in four unrelated patients and may represent a common Brazilian Pompe mutation. The c.2560C > T severe mutation was frequent in our population suggesting a high prevalence in Brazil. Also, eight out of the 21 infantile-onset patients have two truncating mutations predicted to abrogate protein expression. Of the ten late-onset patients who do not carry the common late-onset intronic mutation c.-32-13T > G, five (from three separate families) carry the recently described intronic mutation, c.-32-3C > A, and one sibpair carries the novel missense mutation c.1781G > C in combination with known severe mutation c.1941C > G. The association of these variants (c.1781G > C and c.-32-3C > A) with late-onset disease suggests that they allow for some residual activity in these patients. Our findings help to characterize Pompe disease in Brazil and support the need for additional studies to define the wide clinical and pathological spectrum observed in this disease.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Lysosomal alpha-glucosidaseP10253Details