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Browsing by Author "Hackler, R."

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    A new case of CDG-x with stereotyped dystonic hand movements and optic atrophy
    (Kluwer Academic Publ, 2002)
    Prietsch, V.
    ;
    Peters, V.
    ;
    Hackler, R.
    ;
    Jakobi, R.
    ;
    Assmann, B.
    ;
    Fang, J.
    ;
    Korner, C.
    ;
    Helwig-Rolig, A.
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    Schaefer, J. R.
    ;
    Hoffmann, Georg F.
    We report the clinical findings and the diagnostic work-up of a 17-month-old girl with CDG-x. Predominant clinical signs were, besides psychomotor retardation and truncal hypotonia, stereotyped dystonic hand movements and ophthalmological abnormalities such as optic atrophy, nystagmus and strabismus. Other symptoms that are often found in patients with CDG were not present, such as seizures, microcephaly, cerebellar hypoplasia, dysmorphic features, hepatointestinal disease, coagulopathy or multiorgan involvement. Isoelectric focusing (IEF) of the patient's serum showed a marked elevation of disialotransferrin, thus confirming an IEF type 1 pattern. A generalized glycosylation defect was confirmed also by IEF of a further glycoprotein (alpha(1)-antitrypsin), an increased carbohydrate deficient transferrin (CDT) serum concentration and an increased CDT/transferrin ratio. All known types of CDG-I, secondary glycosylation abnormalities and variants of amino acid sequence were excluded.
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    Congenital disorder of glycosylation IId (CDG-IId) - A new entity: Clinical presentation with Dandy-Walker malformation and myopathy
    (Georg Thieme Verlag Kg, 2002)
    Peters, V.
    ;
    Penzien, J. M.
    ;
    Reiter, G.
    ;
    Korner, C.
    ;
    Hackler, R.
    ;
    Assmann, B.
    ;
    Fang, J.
    ;
    Schaefer, J. R.
    ;
    Hoffmann, Georg F.
    ;
    Heidemann, P. H.
    A 1.5-year-old boy with macrocephaly due to a Dandy-Walker malformation presented with progressive hydrocephalus, extensive muscular hypotonia, transient cholestatic syndrome, extensive coagulation abnormalities and elevated creatine kinase indicating myopathy. Diagnostic work-up indicated a congenital disorder of glycosylation (CDG, formerly carbohydrate deficient glycoprotein syndrome). The serum transferrin pattern obtained by automated isoelectric focusing (IEF) showed an hitherto unreported pattern with strongly elevated tri-, di-, mono- and asialotransferrin bands, increasing in this order together with markedly decreased tetrasialotransferrin. Investigation of two additional glycoproteins, alpha(1)-antitrypsin and alpha(1)-antichymotrypsin, confirmed a generalised defect of glycosylation. All known glycosylation defects could be ruled out by enzymatic analyses in either leukocytes or fibroblasts or by the results obtained by IEF. SDS-electrophoresis demonstrated a marked difference in the molecular weight of transferrin, suggesting the lack of parts or of all oligosaccharide chains. The defect could be delineated to a deficiency of beta-1,4-galactosyltransferase (E.C.2.4.1.38) due to a homozygous insertion (1031-1032 insC). Details of the biochemical and molecular findings will be described elsewhere.

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