Expanding the phenotype, genotype and biochemical knowledge of ALG3-CDG.
Hind AlsharhanBobby G NgEarnest James Paul DanielJennifer FriedmanEniko K PivnickAmal Al-HashemEissa Ali FaqeihPengfei LiuNicole M EngelhardtKierstin N KellerJie ChenPamela A Mazzeonull nullJill A RosenfeldMichael J BamshadDeborah A NickersonKimiyo M RaymondHudson H FreezeMiao HeAndrew C EdmondsonChristina LamPublished in: Journal of inherited metabolic disease (2021)
Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDGs) are a continuously expanding group of monogenic disorders of glycoprotein and glycolipid biosynthesis that cause multisystem diseases. Individuals with ALG3-CDG frequently exhibit severe neurological involvement (epilepsy, microcephaly, and hypotonia), ocular anomalies, dysmorphic features, skeletal anomalies, and feeding difficulties. We present 10 unreported individuals diagnosed with ALG3-CDG based on molecular and biochemical testing with 11 novel variants in ALG3, bringing the total to 40 reported individuals. In addition to the typical multisystem disease seen in ALG3-CDG, we expand the symptomatology of ALG3-CDG to now include endocrine abnormalities, neural tube defects, mild aortic root dilatation, immunodeficiency, and renal anomalies. N-glycan analyses of these individuals showed combined deficiencies of hybrid glycans and glycan extension beyond Man5 GlcNAc2 consistent with their truncated lipid-linked precursor oligosaccharides. This spectrum of N-glycan changes is unique to ALG3-CDG. These expanded features of ALG3-CDG facilitate diagnosis and suggest that optimal management should include baseline endocrine, renal, cardiac, and immunological evaluation at the time of diagnosis and with ongoing monitoring.