Mutations in exon 3 of the glycogen debranching enzyme gene are associated with glycogen storage disease type III that is differentially expressed in liver and muscle.
Open Access
- 15 July 1996
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Clinical Investigation in Journal of Clinical Investigation
- Vol. 98 (2) , 352-357
- https://doi.org/10.1172/jci118799
Abstract
Glycogen storage disease type HI (GSD-III), an autosomal recessive disease, is caused by deficient glycogen debranching enzyme (GDE) activity. Most GSD-III patients are GDE deficient in both liver and muscle (type IIIa), and some GSD-III patients have GDE absent in liver but retained in muscle (type IIIb). The molecular basis for this enzymatic variability is largely unknown. In the present study, the analysis of the GDE gene in three GSD-IIIb patients by single-strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP), DNA sequencing, restriction analysis, and family studies, revealed each of them as being a compound heterozygote for two different mutations. The first mutant alleles in all three patients involved mutations in exon 3 at amino acid codon 6 of the GDE protein. Two had an AG deletion at nucleotides 17 and 18 of the GDE cDNA (17delAG) which resulted in change of subsequent amino acid sequence and a truncated protein (25X); the other had a C to T transition at nucleotide 16 of the cDNA which changed a Glutamine codon to a stop codon (Q6X). The 17delAG mutation was also found in 8 of the 10 additional GSD-IIIb patients. The Q6X mutation was found in one of the remaining two GSD-IIIb patients. These two mutations were not found in any of the 31 GSD-IIIa patients, 2 GSD-IIId patients, nor 28 unrelated normal controls. The second mutant alleles in each of the three GSD-IIIb patients were R864X, R1228X, and W68OX. The R864X and R1228X were not unique for GSD-IIIb as they were also found in GSD-IIIa patients (frequency of 10.3% and 5.2% in Caucasian patients, respectively). Our data demonstrated that both IIIa and IIIb had mutations in the same GDE gene and established for the first time the molecular basis of GSD-III that differentially expressed in liver and muscle. The striking and specific association of exon 3 mutations with GSD-IIIb may provide insight into mechanisms controlling tissue-specific expression of the GDE gene. The identification of exon 3 mutations has clinical significance as well because it distinguished GSD-IIIb from IIIa hence permitting diagnosis from a blood sample rather than a more invasive muscle biopsy.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Transcription-Factor Mutations and DiseaseNew England Journal of Medicine, 1996
- Glycogen Storage Disease Type III (Glycogen Debranching Enzyme Deficiency): Correlation of Biochemical Defects with Myopathy and CardiomyopathyAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1992
- Nonsense mutations inhibit splicing of MVM RNA in cis when they interrupt the reading frame of either exon of the final spliced product.Genes & Development, 1992
- Molecular cloning and nucleotide sequence of cDNA encoding human muscle glycogen debranching enzyme.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1992
- Developmentally regulated expression of an exon containing a stop codon in the gene for glutamic acid decarboxylase.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1990
- Immunoblot analyses of glycogen debranching enzyme in different subtypes of glycogen storage disease type IIIThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1990
- Sex-lethal, a Drosophila sex determination switch gene, exhibits sex-specific RNA splicing and sequence similarity to RNA binding proteinsCell, 1988
- Alternative splicing generates a secreted form of N-CAM in muscle and brainCell, 1988
- Point mutations define a sequence flanking the AUG initiator codon that modulates translation by eukaryotic ribosomesCell, 1986
- Debranching enzyme from rabbit skeletal muscle; Evidence for the location of two active centres on a single polypeptide chainFEBS Letters, 1975