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Homozygous GLUL deletion is embryonically viable and leads to glutamine synthetase deficiency

Authors :
Roifman, Maian; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9858-155X
Niles, Kirsten M
MacNeil, Lauren; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3827-7147
Blaser, Susan
Noor, Abdul
Godoy, Ruth
van Mieghem, Tim
Ryan, Greg
Seaward, Gareth
Sondheimer, Neal
Mercimek-Andrews, Saadet
Schulze, Andreas
Hewson, Stacy
Ovadia, Adi
Chitayat, David
Morgen, Eric K
Hojilla, Carlo
Kolomietz, Elena
Watkins, Nicholas
Häberle, Johannes; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0635-091X
Shannon, Patrick
Roifman, Maian; https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9858-155X
Niles, Kirsten M
MacNeil, Lauren; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3827-7147
Blaser, Susan
Noor, Abdul
Godoy, Ruth
van Mieghem, Tim
Ryan, Greg
Seaward, Gareth
Sondheimer, Neal
Mercimek-Andrews, Saadet
Schulze, Andreas
Hewson, Stacy
Ovadia, Adi
Chitayat, David
Morgen, Eric K
Hojilla, Carlo
Kolomietz, Elena
Watkins, Nicholas
Häberle, Johannes; https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0635-091X
Shannon, Patrick
Source :
Roifman, Maian; Niles, Kirsten M; MacNeil, Lauren; Blaser, Susan; Noor, Abdul; Godoy, Ruth; van Mieghem, Tim; Ryan, Greg; Seaward, Gareth; Sondheimer, Neal; Mercimek-Andrews, Saadet; Schulze, Andreas; Hewson, Stacy; Ovadia, Adi; Chitayat, David; Morgen, Eric K; Hojilla, Carlo; Kolomietz, Elena; Watkins, Nicholas; Häberle, Johannes; Shannon, Patrick (2020). Homozygous GLUL deletion is embryonically viable and leads to glutamine synthetase deficiency. Clinical Genetics, 98(6):613-619.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Glutamine synthetase (GS) is the enzyme responsible for the biosynthesis of glutamine, providing the only source of endogenous glutamine necessary for several critical metabolic and developmental pathways. GS deficiency, caused by pathogenic variants in the glutamate-ammonia ligase (GLUL) gene, is a rare autosomal recessive inborn error of metabolism characterized by systemic glutamine deficiency, persistent moderate hyperammonemia, and clinically devastating seizures and multi-organ failure shortly after birth. The four cases reported thus far were caused by homozygous GLUL missense variants. We report a case of GS deficiency caused by homozygous GLUL gene deletion, diagnosed prenatally and likely representing the most severe end of the spectrum. We expand the known phenotype of this rare condition with novel dysmorphic, radiographic and neuropathologic features identified on post-mortem examination. The biallelic deletion identified in this case also included the RNASEL gene and was associated with immune dysfunction in the fetus. This case demonstrates that total absence of the GLUL gene in humans is viable beyond the embryonic period, despite the early embryonic lethality found in GLUL animal models.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Roifman, Maian; Niles, Kirsten M; MacNeil, Lauren; Blaser, Susan; Noor, Abdul; Godoy, Ruth; van Mieghem, Tim; Ryan, Greg; Seaward, Gareth; Sondheimer, Neal; Mercimek-Andrews, Saadet; Schulze, Andreas; Hewson, Stacy; Ovadia, Adi; Chitayat, David; Morgen, Eric K; Hojilla, Carlo; Kolomietz, Elena; Watkins, Nicholas; Häberle, Johannes; Shannon, Patrick (2020). Homozygous GLUL deletion is embryonically viable and leads to glutamine synthetase deficiency. Clinical Genetics, 98(6):613-619.
Notes :
application/pdf, info:doi/10.5167/uzh-197316, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1443035391
Document Type :
Electronic Resource