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A novel homozygous mutation at the GAA gene in Mexicans with early-onset Pompe disease
Authors:CARMEN ESMER  ROSARIO BECERRA-BECERRA  CLAUDIA PE?A-ZEPEDA  ANTONIO BRAVO-ORO
Abstract:
Glycogen-storage disease type II, also named Pompe disease, is caused by the deficiency of the enzyme acid alpha-glucosidase, which originates lysosomal glycogen accumulation leading to progressive neuromuscular damage. Early-onset Pompe disease shows a debilitating and frequently fulminating course. To date, more than 300 mutations have been described; the majority of them are unique to each affected individual. Most early-onset phenotypes are associated with frameshift mutations leading to a truncated alpha-glucosidase protein with loss of function. Founder effects are responsible from many cases from few highprevalence world regions. Herein we described two apparently unrelated cases affected with classical early-onset Pompe disease, both pertaining to a small region from Central Mexico (the State of San Luis Potosí), the same novel homozygous frameshift mutation at gene GAA (c.1987delC) was demonstrated in both cases. This GAA gene deletion implies a change of glutamine to serine at codon 663, and a new reading frame that ends after 33 base pairs, which leads to the translation of a truncated protein. This report contributes to widen the knowledge on the effect of pathogenic mutations in Pompe disease. Here we postulate the existence of a founder effect.Key words: Early-onset Pompe disease, Acid maltase deficiency, Founder effectGlycogen storage disease type II (Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man, OMIM, accession number 232300), also called Pompe disease, was described by Johannes C. Pompe in 1932. The disorder is caused by a deficiency of the enzyme acid alpha-glucosidase (acid maltase, EC 3.2.1.20, Swiss) which originates lysosomal glycogen accumulation leading to lysosomal swelling, cellular damage and dysfunction (1-3). Affected individuals develop progressive neuromuscular damage, showing a debilitating and frequently fulminating course on the classical, early-onset type of the disease. Other main findings are hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, hypotonia, hepatomegaly, macroglossia, feeding problems and breath difficulty. Currently it is recognized that the late form of Pompe disease has a very variable phenotype that can be confused with a wide range of neuromuscular, pulmonary and cardiovascular diseases with mild, moderate or severe symptoms that present either alone or combined (4-6).Pompe disease has an autosomal recessive inheritance and it is caused by more than 300 mutations that occur all over the gene coding for acid alpha-glucosidase (GAA) located at locus 17q25.2q25.3. The molecular phenomenon responsible of the different types of clinical expression occur by the presence of two either homozygous or compound heterozygous pathogenic mutations in early-onset Pompe cases, whereas late-onset Pompe have one variant and one pathogenic mutation (7). The majority of disease-causing mutations are unique; nonetheless, relatively frequent mutations have been described in certain populations with a possible founder effect traced from the original mutated carrier to the newly occurring cases. Affected cases have been described worldwide with a few high-prevalence regions like South-Africa, Taiwan and Holland (1, 8-10).Herein, we described two unrelated cases affected with classical early-onset Pompe disease, both pertaining to the same small Mexican region, with the same novel homozygous frameshift mutation at gene GAA (c.1987delC), identified by complete gene sequencing.
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