Seven cases of Pompe disease from Greece |
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Authors: | M. Kroos P. Manta I. Mavridou F. Muntoni D. Halley R. Van der Helm D. Zaifeiriou A. Van der Ploeg A. Reuser H. Michelakakis |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Clinical Genetics, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, The Netherlands;(2) Department of Neurology, University of Athens, Greece;(3) Department of Enzymology and Cellular Function, Institute of Child Health, Athens, Greece;(4) Department of Paediatric Neurology, Hammersmith Hospital London, UK;(5) Department of Pediatrics, University of Thessaloniki, Greece;(6) Department of Metabolic Diseases and Genetics, Erasmus MC-Sophia, Rotterdam, The Netherlands |
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Abstract: | We present seven cases of Pompe disease (McKusick 232300; glycogen storage disease type II; acid maltase deficiency) from Greece. The onset of symptoms varied from early childhood to late adulthood, and the patients had quite variable duration of disease. All but one of them had muscle weakness and all had mildly to highly elevated serum creatine kinase. The diagnosis in all cases was confirmed by the finding of acid alpha-glucosidase (EC 3.2.1.3/20) deficiency in cultured skin fibroblasts. Thirteen mutant alleles were identified and nine different pathogenic mutations were encountered. Four were new: c.2071_2072insAGCCG leads to frameshift and total loss of function; c.1856G > A (p.Ser619Asn) leads to 90-95% loss of function; and the splice-site mutations c.1552-3C > G and c.2331+4A > G reduce the number of correct splicing events by more than 90%. The splice-site mutation c.-32-13T > G (IVS1-13T > G) was encountered four times and seems equally common among Greek and other caucasians. The other mutations: c.925G > A (p.Gly309Arg), c.[307T > G; 271G > A] (p.Cys103Gly; Asp91Asn), c.271del and c.1655T > C (p.Leu552Pro) have been reported earlier. Our study highlights the heterogeneity of Pompe disease in Greece and provides tools for diagnosis and carrier detection. |
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