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      Enfermedad por almacenamiento de glucógeno de tipo III en pacientes colombianos: caracterización clínica y molecular Translated title: Molecular and clinical characterization of Colombian patients suffering from type III glycogen storage disease

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          Abstract

          Resumen Introducción. La enfermedad por almacenamiento de glucógeno de tipo III es una alteración autosómica recesiva, en la cual las mutaciones del gen AGL causan una deficiencia en la enzima desramificadora de glucógeno. Se caracteriza por hipoglucemia, hepatomegalia y miopatías progresivas. El análisis molecular del gen AGL ha evidenciado mutaciones que difieren según la población estudiada. En la actualidad, no existen reportes que describan mutaciones en el AGL de pacientes colombianos con esta condición. Objetivo. Describir las características clínicas y moleculares de diez pacientes colombianos con enfermedad por almacenamiento del glucógeno de tipo III. Materiales y métodos. Se analizaron diez pacientes pediátricos colombianos con la enfermedad y se hizo su estudio genético mediante la secuenciación de las regiones que codifican y las intrónicas circundantes del gen AGL con el método de Sanger. Resultados. Todos los pacientes tenían el fenotipo clásico de la enfermedad. El estudio genético reveló la mutación p.Arg910X en dos pacientes. Uno presentó la mutación p.Glu1072AspfsX36 y otro resultó heterocigoto compuesto con las mutaciones p.Arg910X y p.Glu1072AspfsX36. Asimismo, en tres pacientes se detectó la deleción de los exones 4, 5 y 6 del gen AGL. Los estudios de simulación computacional predijeron que estos defectos eran patogénicos. En tres pacientes no se encontraron mutaciones en las regiones amplificadas. Conclusión. Se encontraron mutaciones y deleciones que explican el fenotipo clínico de los pacientes. Este es el primer reporte en el que se describe el fenotipo clínico y el espectro de mutaciones en el gen AGL de pacientes colombianos, lo cual es importante para ofrecer un apropiado pronóstico, y asesoría genética al paciente y a su familia.

          Translated abstract

          Abstract Introduction: Type III glycogen storage disease (GSD III) is an autosomal recessive disorder in which a mutation in the AGL gene causes deficiency of the glycogen debranching enzyme. The disease is characterized by fasting hypoglycemia, hepatomegaly and progressive myopathy. Molecular analyses of AGL have indicated heterogeneity depending on ethnic groups. The full spectrum of AGL mutations in Colombia remains unclear. Objective: To describe the clinical and molecular characteristics of ten Colombian patients diagnosed with GSD III. Materials and methods: We recruited ten Colombian children with a clinical and biochemical diagnosis of GSD III to undergo genetic testing. The full coding exons and the relevant exon-intron boundaries of the AGL underwent Sanger sequencing to identify mutation. Results: All patients had the classic phenotype of the GSD III. Genetic analysis revealed a mutation p.Arg910X in two patients. One patient had the mutation p.Glu1072AspfsX36, and one case showed a compound heterozygosity with p.Arg910X and p.Glu1072AspfsX36 mutations. We also detected the deletion of AGL gene 3, 4, 5, and 6 exons in three patients. The in silico studies predicted that these defects are pathogenic. No mutations were detected in the amplified regions in three patients. Conclusion: We found mutations and deletions that explain the clinical phenotype of GSDIII patients. This is the first report with a description of the clinical phenotype and the spectrum of AGLmutations in Colombian patients. This is importantto provide appropriate prognosis and genetic counseling to the patient and their relatives.

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          Glycogen storage disease type III diagnosis and management guidelines.

          Glycogen storage disease type III is a rare disease of variable clinical severity affecting primarily the liver, heart, and skeletal muscle. It is caused by deficient activity of glycogen debranching enzyme, which is a key enzyme in glycogen degradation. Glycogen storage disease type III manifests a wide clinical spectrum. Individuals with glycogen storage disease type III present with hepatomegaly, hypoglycemia, hyperlipidemia, and growth retardation. Those with type IIIa have symptoms related to liver disease and progressive muscle (cardiac and skeletal) involvement that varies in age of onset, rate of disease progression, and severity. Those with type IIIb primarily have symptoms related to liver disease. This guideline for the management of glycogen storage disease type III was developed as an educational resource for health care providers to facilitate prompt and accurate diagnosis and appropriate management of patients. An international group of experts in various aspects of glycogen storage disease type III met to review the evidence base from the scientific literature and provided their expert opinions. Consensus was developed in each area of diagnosis, treatment, and management. This management guideline specifically addresses evaluation and diagnosis across multiple organ systems (cardiovascular, gastrointestinal/nutrition, hepatic, musculoskeletal, and neuromuscular) involved in glycogen storage disease type III. Conditions to consider in a differential diagnosis stemming from presenting features and diagnostic algorithms are discussed. Aspects of diagnostic evaluation and nutritional and medical management, including care coordination, genetic counseling, hepatic transplantation, and prenatal diagnosis, are addressed. A guideline that will facilitate the accurate diagnosis and appropriate management of individuals with glycogen storage disease type III was developed. This guideline will help health care providers recognize patients with all forms of glycogen storage disease type III, expedite diagnosis, and minimize stress and negative sequelae from delayed diagnosis and inappropriate management. It will also help identify gaps in scientific knowledge that exist today and suggest future studies.
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            Glycogen storage diseases: new perspectives.

            Hasan Ozen (2007)
            Glycogen storage diseases (GSD) are inherited metabolic disorders of glycogen metabolism. Different hormones, including insulin, glucagon, and cortisol regulate the relationship of glycolysis, gluconeogenesis and glycogen synthesis. The overall GSD incidence is estimated 1 case per 20000-43000 live births. There are over 12 types and they are classified based on the enzyme deficiency and the affected tissue. Disorders of glycogen degradation may affect primarily the liver, the muscle, or both. Type Ia involves the liver, kidney and intestine (and Ib also leukocytes), and the clinical manifestations are hepatomegaly, failure to thrive, hypoglycemia, hyperlactatemia, hyperuricemia and hyperlipidemia. Type IIIa involves both the liver and muscle, and IIIb solely the liver. The liver symptoms generally improve with age. Type IV usually presents in the first year of life, with hepatomegaly and growth retardation. The disease in general is progressive to cirrhosis. Type VI and IX are a heterogeneous group of diseases caused by a deficiency of the liver phosphorylase and phosphorylase kinase system. There is no hyperuricemia or hyperlactatemia. Type XI is characterized by hepatic glycogenosis and renal Fanconi syndrome. Type II is a prototype of inborn lysosomal storage diseases and involves many organs but primarily the muscle. Types V and VII involve only the muscle.
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              Glycogen storage disease type III: diagnosis, genotype, management, clinical course and outcome

              Glycogen storage disease type III (GSDIII) is a rare disorder of glycogenolysis due to AGL gene mutations, causing glycogen debranching enzyme deficiency and storage of limited dextrin. Patients with GSDIIIa show involvement of liver and cardiac/skeletal muscle, whereas GSDIIIb patients display only liver symptoms and signs. The International Study on Glycogen Storage Disease (ISGSDIII) is a descriptive retrospective, international, multi-centre cohort study of diagnosis, genotype, management, clinical course and outcome of 175 patients from 147 families (86 % GSDIIIa; 14 % GSDIIIb), with follow-up into adulthood in 91 patients. In total 58 AGL mutations (non-missense mutations were overrepresented and 21 novel mutations were observed) were identified in 76 families. GSDIII patients first presented before the age of 1.5 years, hepatomegaly was the most common presenting clinical sign. Dietary management was very diverse and included frequent meals, uncooked cornstarch and continuous gastric drip feeding. Chronic complications involved the liver (hepatic cirrhosis, adenoma(s), and/or hepatocellular carcinoma in 11 %), heart (cardiac involvement and cardiomyopathy, in 58 % and 15 %, respectively, generally presenting in early childhood), and muscle (pain in 34 %). Type 2 diabetes mellitus was diagnosed in eight out of 91 adult patients (9 %). In adult patients no significant correlation was detected between (non-) missense AGL genotypes and hepatic, cardiac or muscular complications. This study demonstrates heterogeneity in a large cohort of ageing GSDIII patients. An international GSD patient registry is warranted to prospectively define the clinical course, heterogeneity and the effect of different dietary interventions in patients with GSDIII. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s10545-016-9932-2) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: ND
                Role: ND
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                Journal
                bio
                Biomédica
                Biomédica
                Instituto Nacional de Salud (Bogotá, Cundinamarca, Colombia )
                0120-4157
                May 2018
                : 38
                : suppl 1
                : 30-42
                Affiliations
                [2] Medellín orgnameHospital Pablo Tobón Uribe Colombia
                [1] Medellín Antioquía orgnameUniversidad de Antioquia orgdiv1Facultad de Medicina Colombia
                [3] Medellín Antioquía orgnameUniversidad de Antioquia orgdiv1Grupo de Inmunodeficiencias Primarias Colombia
                [4] Medellín Antioquía orgnameUniversidad de Antioquia orgdiv1Escuela de Microbiología Colombia
                Article
                S0120-41572018000500030
                10.7705/biomedica.v38i0.3454
                bad0aecd-9232-4e0f-81d0-4176934c2bcf

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 19 April 2017
                : 25 July 2016
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 49, Pages: 13
                Product

                SciELO Colombia


                sistema de la enzima desramificadora del glucógeno,glucógeno,enfermedad del almacenamiento de glucógeno de tipo III/diagnóstico,glycogenolysis,glycogen debranching enzyme system,glycogen,Glycogen storage disease type III/diagnosis,glucogenólisis.

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