Novel Mutations Found In Individuals With Adult-Onset Pompe Disease

May T. Aung-Htut, Kristin A. Ham, Michel C. Tchan, Sue Fletcher, Steve D. Wilton

GENES(2020)

Cited 7|Views19
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Abstract
Pompe disease, or glycogen storage disease II is a rare, progressive disease leading to skeletal muscle weakness due to deficiency of the acid alpha-1,4-glucosidase enzyme (GAA). The severity of disease and observed time of onset is subject to the various combinations of heterozygous GAA alleles. Here we have characterized two novel mutations: c.2074C>T and c.1910_1918del, and a previously reported c.1082C>G mutation of uncertain clinical significance. These mutations were found in three unrelated patients with adult-onset Pompe disease carrying the common c.-32-13T>G mutation. The c.2074 C>T nonsense mutation has obvious consequences on GAA expression but the c.1910_1918del (deletion of 3 amino acids) and c.1082C>G missense variants are more subtle DNA changes with catastrophic consequences on GAA activity. Molecular and clinical analyses from the three patients corresponded with the anticipated pathogenicity of each mutation.
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Key words
acid alpha-glucosidase,adult-onset Pompe disease,GAA mutation
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