The aim of this study is to report our 3years experience with the screening of congenital disorders of glycosylation. A common isoelectric focusing method with immunofixation was used for analysis of serum transferrin and α1-antitrypsin, apart from several other procedures. A group of about 1000 individuals, both healthy controls and patients, mostly with signs of a metabolic disease were examined. Here we present an overview of 1) hypoglycosylation findings, 2) distribution of protein variants, 3) misguiding rare Tf variants found in our set, and 4) association of some phenotypes with various diseases.
Association of Tf C2 allele with various malfunctions has been noticed before, but is so far unresolved. This is the a report on increased frequency of Tf C1C2 genotype found in cystic fibrosis. Analysis of larger samples and independent confirmation of our results are needed.
Human transferrin (Tf) shows genetic polymorphisms, which may interfere in the screening of congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG). Isoelectric focusing followed by direct immunofixation was used for Tf analysis in controls and several groups of patients. Equivocal results in one case have been recognized as a rare Tf CD variant. A higher incidence of some genetic variants has been reported in connection with certain diseases; of the seven Tf phenotypes detected in our set of samples, an apparently higher frequency of Tf C1C2 variant found in some groups of patients was not significant.
Congenital disorders of glycosylation are a rapidly growing group of inherited (neuro)metabolic disorders characterized by defects in glycosylation of proteins and lipids. This study discusses an analytical problem in the differentiation between hypoglycosylation and transferrin (Tf) protein variants. Analysis of serum Tf by isoelectric focusing is used as a common method suitable for screening 19 out of a total of 22 types of glycosylation defects identified so far. In three members of a family, several indicators showed evidence of a Tf protein variant, however, routine neuraminidase-based demonstration failed to confirm this result. On the assumption that we should be able to exclude Tf protein variants at the screening-level of the diagnostic algorithm, our concern is a possible cause of our failure to confirm some of the Tf D variants (in contrast to the other C, B and D allelic combinations that are commonly well identified). Several explanations are discussed.
Churg-Strauss syndrome is a rare form of small-vessel vasculitis. In the current report, we describe the case of a 17-year-old Czech girl predominantly characterized by peripheral neuropathy, the presence of cardiac and pulmonary involvement, hypereosinophilia, asthma, and sinusitis that led to the diagnosis of Churg-Strauss syndrome.
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