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Erschienen in: Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases 1/2017

Open Access 01.12.2017 | Research

Clinical, biochemical and molecular characterization of Korean patients with mucolipidosis II/III and successful prenatal diagnosis

verfasst von: Mina Yang, Sung Yun Cho, Hyung-Doo Park, Rihwa Choi, Young-Eun Kim, Jinsup Kim, Soo-Youn Lee, Chang-Seok Ki, Jong-Won Kim, Young Bae Sohn, Junghan Song, Dong-Kyu Jin

Erschienen in: Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases | Ausgabe 1/2017

Abstract

Background

Mucolipidosis types II and III (ML II/III) are autosomal recessive disorders caused by a deficiency in the lysosomal enzyme N-acetylglucosamine-1-phosphotransferase. We investigated the molecular genetic characteristics of the GNPTAB gene, which codes for the alpha/beta subunits of a phosphotransferase, in Korean ML II/III patients. We included prenatal tests and evaluated the spectrum of mutations in East Asian populations with ML II/III through a literature review.

Methods

Seven patients from six families were enrolled in the study including two prenatal tests using chorionic villi samples. A diagnosis of ML II/III was made based on clinical findings and increases in serum lysosomal enzyme levels. PCR and direct sequencing were performed to identify GNPTAB mutations.

Results

We found 14 mutant alleles including seven known mutations of c.2189delT (p.Leu730fs*7), c.1090C > T (p.Arg364*), c.2681G > A (p.Trp894*), c.3565C > T (p.Arg1189*), c.310C > T (p.Gln104*), c.1071G > A (p.Trp357*) and c.2574_2575delGA (p.Asn859Glnfs*2). Four were novel variants of unknown significance: c.992A > G (p.Tyr331Cys), c.2666 T > A (p.Leu889*), c.637-6 T > G (p.Thr213Phefs*11), and c.471_472delTT (p.Tyr158Serfs*8). Family studies revealed the probands to be compound heterozygotes. The fetuses carried the same GNPTAB mutations as the mucolipidosis II/III probands in the prenatal diagnosis.

Conclusions

We identified GNPTAB mutations in all patients with ML II/III, but did not identify a hot spot in Korean patients. We successfully performed prenatal diagnosis using molecular investigation.
Abkürzungen
CVSs
Chorionic villi samples
M6P
Mannose-6-phosphate
ML II/III
Mucolipidosis type II/III
MPS
Mucopolysaccharidosis

Background

Mucolipidosis type II/III (ML II/III) is an autosomal recessive inborn error resulted from the accumulation of lysosomal substrates. This rare metabolic disorder is caused by a deficiency of UDP-GlcNAc-1-phosphotransferase, an enzyme responsible for the synthesis of mannose-6-phosphate (M6P), a recognition marker in the cis part of the Golgi apparatus [1, 2]. The loss of M6P recognition results in impaired trafficking of lysosomal hydrolases and eventual lysosomal dysfunction.
ML was initially described in 1967 as a disease similar to mucopolysaccharidosis (MPS) that presented with different features such as low urinary acid mucopolysaccharides and abundant inclusions in fibroblasts [3]. For this reason, ML II wasoriginally called Inclusion Cell or I-Cell disease. ML II is characterized by coarse facial features, short stature, hyperplastic gums, organomegaly, and retarded psychomotor development [4]. ML III, originallyknown as pseudo-Hurler polydystrophy, was described Hurler-like disorder without mucopolysacchariduia [5]. ML III is a milder disorder with attenuated characteristics and survival to adult life. It is allelic to ML II and has a closely related pathogenesis. GlcNAc-1-phosphotransferase is absent in MLII and lacking in ML III. Intermediate forms of ML II and III have been previously described [6]. GlcNAc-1-phosphotransferase is composed of alpha, beta, and gamma subunits, and ML II/III is caused by mutations in GNPTAB, which encodes for the alpha and beta subunits of the phosphotransferase [7].
The diagnosis of ML II/III is based on clinical, radiological, biochemical, and molecular findings. Of these, a mutation study of GNPTAB is important in terms of confirmation of disease and prediction of prognosis. In addition, a molecular analysis of GNPTAB is essential for prenatal diagnosis of ML II/III [8]. In the present study, we investigated GNPTAB mutations in five patients with ML II/III and successfully performed prenatal testing in two pregnant women. In addition, genotypes in Korean patients with ML II/III and the GNPTAB mutation spectrum in East Asian populations with ML II/III were studied through a literature review.

Methods

Patients

Seven individuals from six families were enrolled in the study, including two obtained via prenatal genetic testing using chorionic villi samples (CVSs). Prenatal genetic test was done in case 3 and 4 because they had affected older siblings. In addition, familial studies in cases 3, 5, 6 and 7 were performed. The median age of probands at diagnosis was three years (range, 0.5–7 years), and only one patient was male. A diagnosis of ML II/III was performed based on clinical symptoms and abnormal findings of lysosomal enzyme levels in blood. The study was approved by the Institutional Ethics Committee of Samsung Medical Center (IRB #2015-11-120-001).

Enzyme assays

Lysosomal activity, including that of β-hexosaminidase, β-glucosidase, α-N-acetylglucosaminidase, in the plasma and leukocytes was measured using methylumbelliferyl substrates in spectrofluorometry (Beckman Coulter DU-650, Fullerton, CA) at wavelengths of 360 and 448 nm. Arysulfatase A was measured using the substrate p-nitrocatechol sulfate. Enzyme activities of Cases 5 and 6 were measured at an outside hospital.

PCR and sequencing

Genomic DNA was extracted from peripheral blood leukocytes with the Wizard Genomic DNA Purification Kit (Promega, Madison, WI, USA) according to the manufacturer’s recommendations. All 21 exons along with flanking regions of the GNPTAB gene were amplified using PCR with primers (Table 1) designed by the authors (Model 9700: Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA). For reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR), cDNA corresponding to exons 6–8 was amplified with primers (forward: actaaggatgttgaagatgccc, reverse: tcctgcttagactggctgatg) by use of cDNA Synthesis Kit (Applied Biosystems). The amplified products were sequenced using the BigDye Terminator Cycle Sequencing Ready Reaction Kit (Applied Biosystems) on an ABI Prism 3100 Genetic Analyzer (Applied Biosystems). Nucleotides were numbered according to the corresponding GenBank accession number of GNPTAB (NM_024312.4).
Table 1
Sequences of Primers Used for PCR amplification and Sequencing of GNPTAB
Exon
Primers
1
F: ctatgcccctccgtcctc
R: gctcaggagttcgagaccag
2
F: ttgtccttttcaggaactgtagc
R: cacaggggccacactaatct
3
F: cccccagctacagtttgaa
R: acctccacctcccaaagttc
4
F: ggccaccttatattggagca
R: actctaaccctccccagtgc
5
F: tccatgagataaaagtcttcatttg
R: gcagctgttttgcttctcttt
6
F: tcccatgaagaattcccttt
R: gcatcacaacacaagcttcaa
7
F: gctgtttttctttgagaatcttttt
R: aaggagtgaggctcttctgg
8
F: ggaggttgaggtgagcagag
R: taccaaaccaatggcagtga
9
F: aatgctgtctctttgaattttgg
R: gagagctgtttgggtttggt
10
F: ccctttacccttctacctcca
R: tatgcttcccaagctggtct
11
F: tcaacgcagcaggatctaaa
R: actcctcccagctcagcttt
12
F: tgatccagcctcctctgc
R: cctcttcagtgatttatgttgttctc
13_1
F: cacaaggacgacatgcaaat
R: cgtaacccttctgggctgta
13_2
F: tgatccttctcccaaaccag
R: tgatctcagcaaggctgact
13_3
F: aggcggaaatcctttttgag
R: aatcagagatgggggctttt
13_4
F: gctccacaggaaaaacaggt
R: aaatgaaaccatgtaagaaaagca
14
F: tgacccgttaacatgtatttca
R: catttgcagagatggacttttt
15
F: tgctcgtgtttgagttgtttg
R: ggttggtctcgaactcctga
16
F: ttggcattgtctcattctgc
R: ttacgcatctatggggtgaa
17
F: ggtttggtttgtgaaaaatgc
R: ccgtagtggactcaacatcca
18
F: aatcacaaaggtctggcttttt
R: atgggggaccctatctcaac
19
F: tcattcccccagagaatcat
R: aggttgcagtgagctgaggt
20
F: cctctctcctgcctggataa
R: tgctgcctgaatattgtgaaa
21
F: ttttggaagaggaatgatgga
R: aggatgacaggtccatgagc
Novel missense variation mutations were analyzed for mutational possibility using in silico analysis through Polymorphism Phenotyping-2 (PolyPhen-2) [9] and Sorting Intolerant from Tolerant (SIFT) [10]. The 1000 Genomes Project data [11], the Exome Aggregation Consortium [12], and the NCBI database of Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms (dbSNPs) were checked for known sequence variants. Evolutionary conservation of amino acid residues in various species was assessed using the EVOLA website (http://​www.​h-invitational.​jp/​evola_​main/​annotation.​cgi?​hit=​HIT000331461).

Results

The common disease-related symptoms at diagnosis were short stature, multiple joint contracture, coarse face, and developmental delay. Patients with ML II showed typical coarse face: flat face, shallow orbits, depressed nasal bridge, prominent mouth, and gingival hypertrophy. Patients with ML III showed mild coarse face without gingival hypertrophy. Only Patient 7 showed hepatosplenomegaly. Patient 1, 2, 5, 6, and 7 showed mild thickness of heart valves. Patients with ML II showed remarkably height less than −2.2 standard deviation score (SDS), and patients with ML III showed relatively short stature (−2 ~ −0.5 SDS). Clinical information and identified mutations are summarized in Table 2.
Table 2
Clinical characteristics and GNPTAB mutations in seven patients with ML II/III
Case no.
Phenotype
Age at Dx. (month)
Sex
Symptoms at diagnosis
Nucleotide change
Nucleotide change
Amino acid change
1
III
3.10
M
growth retardation, joint contracture, developmental delay
c.992A > G
c.2189delT
p.Tyr331Cys
p.Leu730fs*7
2
II
0.5
F
developmental delay, synostosis, puffy face
c.1090C > T
c.2666 T > A
p.Arg364*
p.Leu889*
3a
NA
NA
F
normal, prior affected sibling
c.2681G > A
c.3565C > T
p.Trp894*
p.Arg1189*
4a
NA
NA
F
normal, prior affected sibling
c.310C > T
c.3565C > T
p.Gln104*
p.Arg1189*
5
III
7.3
F
mental retardation, asymmetric chest, joint contracture,
c.637-6 T > G
c.2574_2575delGA
p.Thr213Phefs*11
p.Asn859Glnfs*2
6
III
6.3
F
joint contracture
c.637-6 T > G
c.2574_2575delGA
p.Thr213Phefs*11
p.Asn859Glnfs*2
7
II
1.8
F
growth retardation, joint contracture, puffy face, hepatosplenomegaly
c.471_472delTT
c.1071G > A
p.Tyr158Serfs*8
p.Trp357*
aPrenatal test, Dx diagnosis, NA not applicable
The representative radiographs of ML II and III are shown in Figs. 1 and 2, respectively. Radiographs of patient 7 with ML II at the age of 21 months show features reminiscent of “osteitis fibrosa cystica” in Fig. 1. Erosive changes, especially in the hands and hips, are seen (Fig. 1a, b). The proximal phalanges are broad and under-modelled. The proximal metacarpals show a mixture of features of osteodystrophy and dysostosis multiplex, becoming eroded and narrowed to a point. The carpal bones are osteopenic and hypoplastic. There is also over-modelling of the long bones and bowing of the proximal end of the femur leading to coxa valga or a or s also over-modelling of the long bones and bowing of the proximal hypoplastic and resorbed (Fig. 1b). In addition, there is osteopenia of the spine. The spine shows thoracolumbar kyphosis, beaking of the vertebrae (Fig. 1c), and the skull shows J-shaped sella turcica (Fig. 1d), which are typical of lysosomal storage disorders with skeletal involvement.
Radiographs of patient 6 with ML III at the age of 19 years are shown in Fig. 2. The characteristic radiologic findings of the hands are small and irregular carpal bones and relatively wide proximal phalanges (Fig. 2a). In the lumbar spine, irregular delineation of the vertebral bodies is seen (Fig. 2b). In the pelvis, progressive hip dysplasia with a flattened acetabulum and femoral head destruction are seen (Fig. 2c). The plasma levels of lysosomal enzyme activities were measured, excluding those in Cases 3 and 4, and are listed in Table 3. The plasma activity of lysosomal hydrolases tested showed a 5- to 25-fold increase in upper reference limit as follows: Arysulfatase A (x25), α-N-acetylglucosaminidase (x5 ~ 26), and β-hexosaminidase (x7 ~ 24). Otherwise, the activities of none of these enzymes were increased in leukocytes.
Table 3
Lysosomal enzyme activities in patients with ML II/III
 
Case no.
Reference range
Reference range a
 
1
2
5a
6a
7
(nmol/hr/mg)
(nmol/min/mL)
Arylsulfatase A
 Plasma
847
312
42
43
2228
NA
0.1–1.6
 Leukocyte
66
26
NA
NA
38
25–80
NA
α-N-Acetylglucosaminidase
 Plasma
234
NA
9
NA
NA
22.3–60.9
0.1–0.6
 Leukocyte
0.93
NA
NA
NA
NA
0.90–1.51
NA
β-Hexosaminidase
 Plasma
4520
12247
14
13
8196
374–666
0.5–3.1
 Leukocyte
728
482
NA
NA
358
611–991
NA
β-Glucosidase
 Plasma
0.7
0.4
NA
NA
0.86
NA
NA
 Leukocyte
7.0
9.2
NA
NA
8.3
5.1–11.32
NA
β-Glucuronidase
 Plasma
NA
NA
18
19
NA
NA
0.1–2.0
 Leukocyte
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA
NA not available; aperformed at outside hospital
Fourteen mutant alleles including seven known (c.2189delT (p.Leu730fs*7), c.1090C > T (p.Arg364*), c.2681G > A (p.Trp894*), c.3565C > T (p.Arg1189*), c.310C > T (p.Gln104*), c.1071G > A (p.Trp357*) and c.2574_2575delGA (p.Asn859Glnfs*2)) and four novel (missense, nonsense, frameshift, and splicing mutations) mutations were detected. The four novel mutations were c.992A > G (p.Tyr331Cys), c.2666 T > A (p.Leu889*), c.637-6 T > G, and c.471_472delTT (p.Tyr158Serfs*8). All were absent in the healthy controls of the 1000 Genomes Project and Exome Aggregation Consortium data. Cases 5 and 6 are siblings; they are the second and third of three children, where the eldest child has a normal phenotype. The family study of Cases 5 and 6 revealed the mutation c.637-6 T > G in a father and the eldest sister, and c.2574_2575delGA in a mother. In order to determine a possible splicing aberration of c.637-6 T > G, RT-PCR sequencing in case 6 was performed. The result revealed that a new splice site was observed which leads to an insertion of 5 nucleotides and a premature stop codon (p.Thr213Phefs*11) (Fig. 3). A family study of Case 3 and 7 was also performed, which revealed the probands to be compound heterozygous. No family members who participated in the family study were affected individuals, and all had a heterozygous mutant allele. Cases 3 and 4 were prenatal tests with chorionic villi sampling in which the fetus carried the same GNPTAB mutations as the ML II/III probands.
All reported GNPTAB mutations in Korean patients with ML II/III are listed in Table 4. A total of 14 mutations have been reported in the Korean population, including those from this study. The most common type of mutation was a nonsense mutation (50%), followed by frameshift (31%), splicing (13%), and missense (6%) mutations. Frameshift mutation is the most common mutation in Asian populations (52%). All mutations reported in Asian populations are summarized in Table 5. The c.3565C > T (p.Arg1189*) mutation was most frequently observed in Korean and Japanese populations (11.5 and 32.5%).
Table 4
GNPTAB mutations in 13 Korean patients with ML II/III
Mutation type
Exon no.
Nucleotide change
Amino acid change
No. of alleles
Reference
Missense
9
c.992A > G
p.Tyr331Cys
1
This study
Nonsense
3
c.310C > T
p.Gln104*
2
[13], This study
Nonsense
9
c.1071G > A
p.Trp357*
1
This study
Nonsense
9
c.1090C > T
p.Arg364*
1
This study
Nonsense
13
c.2666 T > A
p.Leu889*
1
This study
Nonsense
13
c.2681G > A
p.Trp894*
2
[13], This study
Nonsense
15
c.3091C > T
p.Arg1031*
1
[14]
Nonsense
16
c.3173C > G
p.Ser1058*
1
[13]
Nonsense
19
c.3565C > T
p.Arg1189*
5
[13], This study
Frameshift
5
C.471_472delTT
p.Tyr158Serfs*8
1
This study
Frameshift
13
c.2189delT
p.Leu730fs*7
1
This study
Frameshift
13
c.2574_2575delGA
p.Asn859Glnfs*2
3
[13], This study
Frameshift
19
c.3456_3459dupCAAC
p.Ile1154Glnfs*3
1
[14]
Frameshift
19
c.3474_3475delTA
p.His1158fs*15
1
[13]
Splicing
IVS6
c.637-6 T > G
p.Thr213Phefs*11
2
This study
Splicing
IVS13
c.2715 + 1G > A
-
2
[13]
Table 5
Summary of all reported GNPTAB mutations in East Asian patients with ML II/III
Mutation type
Nucleotide change
Amino acid change
Exon no.
Reference
Allele frequency
Ethnicity
Missense
c.992A > G
p.Tyr331Cys
9
This study
0.9% (1/120)
KOR
Missense
c.1001G > T
p.Arg334Leu
9
[15]
0.9% (1/120)
JPN
Missense
c.1120 T > C
p.Phe374Leu
10
[15]
6.7% (8/120)
JPN
Missense
c.2866C > T
p.His956Tyr
14
[15]
1.8% (2/120)
JPN
Missense
c.3458A > G
p.Asn1153Ser
19
[15]
0.9% (1/120)
JPN
Nonsense
c.310C > T
p.Gln104*
3
[13, 15], This study
5.3% (6/120)
KOR, JPN
Nonsense
c.1071G > A
p.Trp357*
9
[16], This study
2.7% (3/120)
KOR, CHN
Nonsense
c.1090C > T
p.Arg364*
9
[16, 23], This study
5.9% (7/120)
KOR, CHN
Nonsense
c.2666 T > A
p.Leu889*
13
This study
0.9% (1/120)
KOR
Nonsense
c.2681G > A
p.Trp894*
13
[13, 15], This study
3.4% (4/120)
KOR, JPN
Nonsense
c.3091C > T
p.Arg1031*
15
[14]
0.9% (1/120)
KOR
Nonsense
c.3173C > G
p.Ser1058*
16
[13]
0.9% (1/120)
KOR
Nonsense
c.3565C > T
p.Arg1189*
19
[13, 15, 24], This study
32.5% (39/120)
KOR, JPN, CHN
Frameshift
c.471_472delTT
p.Tyr158Serfs*8
5
This study
0.9% (1/120)
KOR
Frameshift
c.914_915insA
p.Asp305fs
8
[15]
0.9% (1/120)
JPN
Frameshift
c.2089_2090insC
p.Leu697fs
13
[15]
1.8% (2/120)
JPN
Frameshift
c.2189delT
p.Leu730fs*7
13
This study
0.9% (1/120)
KOR
Frameshift
c.2422delC
p.Leu808fs*19
13
[24]
0.9% (1/120)
CHN
Frameshift
c.2427delC
p.Leu810fs
13
[15]
0.9% (1/120)
JPN
Frameshift
c.2544delA
p.Lys848fs
13
[15]
1.8% (4/120)
JPN
Frameshift
c.2574_2575delGA
p.Asn859Glnfs*2
13
[13], This study
2.5% (3/120)
KOR
Frameshift
c.2693delA
p.Lys898fs
13
[15]
0.9% (1/120)
JPN
Frameshift
c.3310delG
p.Ala1104fs
17
[15]
0.9% (1/120)
JPN
Frameshift
c.3388_3389insC + c.3390C > T
p.Val1130fs
18
[15]
0.9% (1/120)
JPN
Frameshift
c.3428_3429insA
p.Asn1143fs
18
[15]
0.9% (1/120)
JPN
Frameshift
c.3456_3459dupCAAC
p.Ile1154Glnfs*3
19
[14]
0.9% (1/120)
KOR
Frameshift
c.3474_3475delTA
p.His1158fs*15
19
[13]
0.9% (1/120)
KOR
Frameshift
c.3741_3744delAGAA
p.Glu1248fs
21
[15]
0.9% (1/120)
JPN
Frameshift
duplication exon2
Frameshift
2
[15]
5.0% (6/120)
JPN
Splicing
c.637-6 T > G
p.Thr213Phefs*11
IVS6
This study
1.8% (2/120)
KOR
Splicing
c.2715 + 1G > A
-
IVS13
[13, 15, 23]
7.5% (9/120)
KOR, JPN, CHN
CHN Chinese, JPN Japanese, KOR Korean

Discussion

In this study, five patients with ML II/III were confirmed through molecular genetic testing, and two cases were successfully screened using prenatal tests. A total of 14 mutant alleles were found in seven cases of ML II/III, and four of them were novel. Among four novel GNPTAB mutations, c.992A > G (p.Tyr331Cys) was the first missense variation detected in a Korean patient with ML II/III. There were no other missense variations in Korean ML II/III patients. The novel c.992A > G variation was considered to be a likely pathogenic variant because the effect of the amino acid change of p.Tyr331Cys was predicted to be “likely damaging” by PolyPhen-2 and “not tolerated” by SIFT. In addition, p.Tyr331 is a highly conserved region among several species (Fig. 4). Evolutionary conservation of the amino acid residues for p.Tyr331 has been observed in various mammals and zebrafish (Homo sapiens, Pan troglodytes, Pongo pygmaeus, Macaca mulatta, Mus musculus, Rattus norvegicus, Canis lupusfamiliaris, Equus caballus, Bos Taurus, Monodelphis domestica, and Danio rerio).
Another novel splicing mutation (c.637-6 T > G) was observed in two sisters (Cases 5 and 6). Their father and eldest sister were heterozygous carriers of the c.637-6 T > G mutation. RT-PCR sequencing revealed that this mutation created a new cryptic 3′ splice site resulting in truncated proteins. Although there have been some reports describing molecular genetic analyses of MLs, there were a few reports in the Korean population. No homozygotes were observed in the present study or in other studies on the Korean population [13, 14], while homozygotes have been detected in the Chinese and Japanese populations [15, 16].
To date, three cases in the Korean population have been identified to be compound heterozygotes for two nonsense mutations; both were patients with ML II. The affected children of the prenatal diagnosis cases (Cases 3 and 4), the probands reported by Paik et al. [13], had cardiac anomalies of coronary artery atresia or mitral valve prolapse and expired at 13 years and 3 years of age, respectively. In addition, compound heterozygotes for a nonsense and frameshift mutation also exhibited the ML II phenotype. On the other hand, patients that were heterozygous for at least one allele with a missense or splicing mutation demonstrated an attenuated phenotype. This genotype-phenotype correlation in ML II/III is compatible with the results described in previous reports [13, 1719]. Genotypes with compound heterozygotes consisting of nonsense and frameshift mutations are expected to produce no RNA product, and they are associated with a more severe phenotype (ML II). Thus, phenotype seems to be well correlated with genotype in 13 Korean patients.
According to the Human Gene Mutation Database, more than 130 GNPTAB mutations have been reported in patients with ML II/III [20]. Figure 5 shows the GNPTAB mutation spectrum according to ethnic population with ML II/III. A missense mutation is the most abundant type of mutation (27%), and a small deletion is the next most common (25%). In the Korean population, however, only one missense mutation (6%) has been observed to date, while nonsense mutations make up 50% of mutations [13, 14]. In a Japanese population, frameshifts were the most common mutation type (61%), and missense mutations were relatively common (22%); the frequently observed mutation c.3565C > T (p.Arg1189*) had an allele frequency of 32.5% [15]. In a Korean population, the most frequently observed mutation was c.3565C > T (p.Arg1189*) (11.5%, 5/26 alleles), excluding the overlapping case of siblings, but the difference in frequency compared to the second most common mutation (c.2574_2575delGA, 7.7%) was not large. The c.3503delTC mutation, known as a single causal mutation in a French-Canadian founder population [21], was the most frequently encountered mutation in the largest study in a Western population [19]. Considering that c.3503delTC has not been observed in Asian populations, the spectrum of mutation type seems to exhibit ethnic differences.
In this study, two prenatal tests with CVS were successfully performed, revealing the same mutations as those present in the probands. To the best of our knowledge, only one case has been published on the prenatal diagnosis of ML II/III by means of molecular study [8]. In Korea, a prenatal test of ML II/III is legal, and this is the first case of prenatal investigation of ML II/III. As there are currently no effective therapies such as hematopoietic stem cell transplantation [22], a prenatal test for this mutation is expected to simply provide information to the parents of probands with ML II/III.

Conclusions

The direct measurement of UDP-GlcNAc-1-phosphotransferase is complicated and not available in many countries. In addition, enzyme assays might have some limitations in terms of interpretation. Thus, molecular genetic investigation is clinically very useful in the diagnosis of ML II/III patients. In this respect, GNPTAB genotyping is essential to confirm the diagnosis of ML II/III and is helpful for distinguishing carriers via prenatal diagnosis.

Acknowledgments

Not applicable.

Funding

This study was supported by a grant from the Korea Health Technology R&D Project, Ministry of Health and Welfare, Republic of Korea (A120030).

Availability of data and materials

All available data, including PCR primer sequences, have been included in this manuscript.

Authors’ contributions

All authors contributed to the manuscript preparation; MY wrote the draft; SYC, JK, YBS, and DKJ collected the samples and provided clinical data; RC, YEK, HDP, JS and SYL analyzed biochemical findings; MY, RC, CSK, HDP and JWK analyzed molecular genetic findings; MY and HDP conceived and designed the study; HDP and DKJ took responsibility for the integrity and the accuracy of the data; MY, SYC and HDP reviewed all data and revised the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Parental consent was obtained for publication of findings.
This study was approved by the Institutional Review Board of the Samsung Medical Center and conducted according to the Declaration of Helsinki Principle. Parental informed consent was obtained before the start of this study in accordance with institutional review board standards.
Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://​creativecommons.​org/​licenses/​by/​4.​0/​), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://​creativecommons.​org/​publicdomain/​zero/​1.​0/​) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
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Metadaten
Titel
Clinical, biochemical and molecular characterization of Korean patients with mucolipidosis II/III and successful prenatal diagnosis
verfasst von
Mina Yang
Sung Yun Cho
Hyung-Doo Park
Rihwa Choi
Young-Eun Kim
Jinsup Kim
Soo-Youn Lee
Chang-Seok Ki
Jong-Won Kim
Young Bae Sohn
Junghan Song
Dong-Kyu Jin
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2017
Verlag
BioMed Central
Erschienen in
Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases / Ausgabe 1/2017
Elektronische ISSN: 1750-1172
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13023-016-0556-2

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