Raras
Buscar doenças, sintomas, genes...
DPM1-CDG
ORPHA:79322CID-10 · E77.8CID-11 · 5C54.2OMIM 608799DOENÇA RARA

As síndromes CDG (Distúrbios Congênitos da Glicosilação) são um grupo de distúrbios autossômicos recessivos que afetam a síntese de glicoproteínas. A síndrome CDG tipo Ie é caracterizada por atraso psicomotor, convulsões, hipotonia, dismorfismo facial e microcefalia. Anomalias oculares também são muito comuns.

Mantido por Agente Raras·Colaborar como especialista →

Introdução

O que você precisa saber de cara

📋

As síndromes CDG (Distúrbios Congênitos da Glicosilação) são um grupo de distúrbios autossômicos recessivos que afetam a síntese de glicoproteínas. A síndrome CDG tipo Ie é caracterizada por atraso psicomotor, convulsões, hipotonia, dismorfismo facial e microcefalia. Anomalias oculares também são muito comuns.

Publicações científicas
7 artigos
Último publicado: 2024 Aug

Escala de raridade

CLASSIFICAÇÃO ORPHANET · BRASIL 2024
<1 / 1 000 000
Ultra-rara
<1/50k
Muito rara
1/20k
Rara
1/10k
Pouco freq.
1/5k
Incomum
1/2k
Prevalência
0.0
Worldwide
Casos conhecidos
9
pacientes catalogados
Início
Infancy
+ neonatal
🏥
SUS: Cobertura mínimaScore: 15%
CID-10: E77.8
🇧🇷Dados SUS / DATASUS
PROCEDIMENTOS SIGTAP (6)
0202010279
Dosagem de aminoácidos (erros inatos)metabolic_test
0202010295
Dosagem de ácidos orgânicos na urinagenetic_test
0202010490
Teste de triagem para erros inatos do metabolismonewborn_screening
0202010694
Sequenciamento completo do exoma (WES)rehabilitation
0202080013
Teste do pezinho (triagem neonatal)
0301070040
Atendimento em reabilitação — doenças raras
Você se identifica com essa condição?
O Raras está aqui pra te apoiar — com ou sem diagnóstico

Encontrou um erro ou informação desatualizada? Sugira uma correção →

Entender a doença

Do básico ao detalhe, leia no seu ritmo

Preparando trilha educativa...

Sinais e sintomas

O que aparece no corpo e com que frequência cada sintoma acontece

Partes do corpo afetadas

🧠
Neurológico
19 sintomas
🫃
Digestivo
7 sintomas
😀
Face
7 sintomas
👁️
Olhos
6 sintomas
🦴
Ossos e articulações
5 sintomas
💪
Músculos
3 sintomas

+ 27 sintomas em outras categorias

Características mais comuns

100%prev.
Concentração elevada de transaminase hepática circulante
Frequente (79-30%)
90%prev.
Convulsão
Muito frequente (99-80%)
90%prev.
Microcefalia secundária
Muito frequente (99-80%)
90%prev.
Hipotonia do lactente
Muito frequente (99-80%)
90%prev.
Concentração elevada de creatina quinase circulante
Muito frequente (99-80%)
90%prev.
Atraso do neurodesenvolvimento
Muito frequente (99-80%)
81sintomas
Muito frequente (6)
Frequente (8)
Ocasional (45)
Sem dados (22)

Os sintomas variam de pessoa para pessoa. Abaixo estão as 81 características clínicas mais associadas, ordenadas por frequência.

Concentração elevada de transaminase hepática circulanteElevated circulating hepatic transaminase concentration
Frequente (79-30%)100%
ConvulsãoSeizure
Muito frequente (99-80%)90%
Microcefalia secundáriaSecondary microcephaly
Muito frequente (99-80%)90%
Hipotonia do lactenteFloppy infant
Muito frequente (99-80%)90%
Concentração elevada de creatina quinase circulanteElevated circulating creatine kinase concentration
Muito frequente (99-80%)90%

Linha do tempo da pesquisa

Publicações por ano — veja quando o interesse científico cresceu
Anos de pesquisa2desde 2024
Total histórico7PubMed
Últimos 10 anos5publicações
Pico20171 papers
Linha do tempo
2024Hoje · 2026🧪 2019Primeiro ensaio clínico
Publicações por ano (últimos 10 anos)

Encontrou um erro ou informação desatualizada? Sugira uma correção →

Genética e causas

O que está alterado no DNA e como passa nas famílias

Genes associados

1 gene identificado com associação a esta condição. Padrão de herança: Autosomal recessive.

DPM1Dolichol-phosphate mannosyltransferase subunit 1Disease-causing germline mutation(s) inTolerante
FUNÇÃO

Transfers mannose from GDP-mannose to dolichol monophosphate to form dolichol phosphate mannose (Dol-P-Man) which is the mannosyl donor in pathways leading to N-glycosylation, glycosyl phosphatidylinositol membrane anchoring, and O-mannosylation of proteins; catalytic subunit of the dolichol-phosphate mannose (DPM) synthase complex

LOCALIZAÇÃO

Endoplasmic reticulum

VIAS BIOLÓGICAS (4)
Synthesis of dolichyl-phosphate mannoseMaturation of DENV proteinsDefective DPM3 causes DPM3-CDGDefective DPM2 causes DPM2-CDG
MECANISMO DE DOENÇA

Congenital disorder of glycosylation 1E

A form of congenital disorder of glycosylation, a multisystem disorder caused by a defect in glycoprotein biosynthesis and characterized by under-glycosylated serum glycoproteins. Congenital disorders of glycosylation result in a wide variety of clinical features, such as defects in the nervous system development, psychomotor retardation, dysmorphic features, hypotonia, coagulation disorders, and immunodeficiency. The broad spectrum of features reflects the critical role of N-glycoproteins during embryonic development, differentiation, and maintenance of cell functions. Some CDG1E patients have features consistent with a dystroglycanopathy and congenital muscular dystrophy, including O-mannosylation defect, camptodactyly, elevated creatine kinase, motor delay and dystrophic changes on muscel biopsy.

EXPRESSÃO TECIDUAL(Ubíquo)
Linfócitos
94.4 TPM
Fibroblastos
90.2 TPM
Testículo
78.2 TPM
Útero
70.8 TPM
Cervix Ectocervix
68.1 TPM
OUTRAS DOENÇAS (1)
congenital disorder of glycosylation type 1E
HGNC:3005UniProt:O60762

Variantes genéticas (ClinVar)

53 variantes patogênicas registradas no ClinVar.

🧬 DPM1: NM_003859.3(DPM1):c.679-6A>T ()
🧬 DPM1: NM_003859.3(DPM1):c.225del (p.Glu76fs) ()
🧬 DPM1: NM_003859.3(DPM1):c.566T>G (p.Leu189Ter) ()
🧬 DPM1: NM_003859.3(DPM1):c.563+1G>A ()
🧬 DPM1: NM_003859.3(DPM1):c.566T>A (p.Leu189Ter) ()
Ver todas no ClinVar

Diagnóstico

Os sinais que médicos procuram e os exames que confirmam

Carregando...

Tratamento e manejo

Remédios, cuidados de apoio e o que precisa acompanhar

Pipeline de tratamentos
Pipeline regulatório — de medicamentos já aprovados a drogas em pesquisa exploratória.
·Pré-clínico1
Medicamentos catalogadosEnsaios clínicos· 0 medicamentos · 1 ensaio
Carregando informações de tratamento...

Onde tratar no SUS

Hospitais de referência no Brasil e o protocolo oficial do SUS (PCDT)

🇧🇷 Atendimento SUS — DPM1-CDG

🗺️

Selecione um estado ou use sua localização para ver resultados.

Dados de DATASUS/CNES, SBGM, ABNeuro e Ministério da Saúde. Sempre confirme a disponibilidade diretamente com o estabelecimento.

Pesquisa ativa

Ensaios clínicos abertos e novidades científicas recentes

🟢 Recrutando agora

1 pesquisa recrutando participantes. Converse com seu médico sobre a possibilidade de participar.

Outros ensaios clínicos

🧪 Está conduzindo uma pesquisa?
Divulgue para pacientes e familiares que acompanham esta doença.
Divulgar pesquisa →

Publicações mais relevantes

Timeline de publicações
5 papers (10 anos)
#1

Cardiomyopathy, an uncommon phenotype of congenital disorders of glycosylation: Recommendations for baseline screening and follow-up evaluation.

Molecular genetics and metabolism2024 Aug

Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) are a continuously expanding group of monogenic disorders that disrupt glycoprotein and glycolipid biosynthesis, leading to multi-systemic manifestations. These disorders are categorized into various groups depending on which part of the glycosylation process is impaired. The cardiac manifestations in CDG can significantly differ, not only across different types but also among individuals with the same genetic cause of CDG. Cardiomyopathy is an important phenotype in CDG. The clinical manifestations and progression of cardiomyopathy in CDG patients have not been well characterized. This study aims to delineate common patterns of cardiomyopathy across a range of genetic causes of CDG and to propose baseline screening and follow-up evaluation for this patient population. Patients with molecular confirmation of CDG who were enrolled in the prospective or memorial arms of the Frontiers in Congenital Disorders of Glycosylation Consortium (FCDGC) natural history study were ascertained for the presence of cardiomyopathy based on a retrospective review of their medical records. All patients were evaluated by clinical geneticists who are members of FCDGC at their respective academic centers. Patients were screened for cardiomyopathy, and detailed data were retrospectively collected. We analyzed their clinical and molecular history, imaging characteristics of cardiac involvement, type of cardiomyopathy, age at initial presentation of cardiomyopathy, additional cardiac features, the treatments administered, and their clinical outcomes. Of the 305 patients with molecularly confirmed CDG participating in the FCDGC natural history study as of June 2023, 17 individuals, nine females and eight males, were identified with concurrent diagnoses of cardiomyopathy. Most of these patients were diagnosed with PMM2-CDG (n = 10). However, cardiomyopathy was also observed in other diagnoses, including PGM1-CDG (n = 3), ALG3-CDG (n = 1), DPM1-CDG (n = 1), DPAGT1-CDG (n = 1), and SSR4-CDG (n = 1). All PMM2-CDG patients were reported to have hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Dilated cardiomyopathy was observed in three patients, two with PGM1-CDG and one with ALG3-CDG; left ventricular non-compaction cardiomyopathy was diagnosed in two patients, one with PGM1-CDG and one with DPAGT1-CDG; two patients, one with DPM1-CDG and one with SSR4-CDG, were diagnosed with non-ischemic cardiomyopathy. The estimated median age of diagnosis for cardiomyopathy was 5 months (range: prenatal-27 years). Cardiac improvement was observed in three patients with PMM2-CDG. Five patients showed a progressive course of cardiomyopathy, while the condition remained unchanged in eight individuals. Six patients demonstrated pericardial effusion, with three patients exhibiting cardiac tamponade. One patient with SSR4-CDG has been recently diagnosed with cardiomyopathy; thus, the progression of the disease is yet to be determined. One patient with PGM1-CDG underwent cardiac transplantation. Seven patients were deceased, including five with PMM2-CDG, one with DPAGT1-CDG, and one with ALG3-CDG. Two patients died of cardiac tamponade from pericardial effusion; for the remaining patients, cardiomyopathy was not necessarily the primary cause of death. In this retrospective study, cardiomyopathy was identified in ∼6% of patients with CDG. Notably, the majority, including all those with PMM2-CDG, exhibited hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Some cases did not show progression, yet pericardial effusions were commonly observed, especially in PMM2-CDG patients, occasionally escalating to life-threatening cardiac tamponade. It is recommended that clinicians managing CDG patients, particularly those with PMM2-CDG and PGM1-CDG, be vigilant of the cardiomyopathy risk and risk for potentially life-threatening pericardial effusions. Cardiac surveillance, including an echocardiogram and EKG, should be conducted at the time of diagnosis, annually throughout the first 5 years, followed by check-ups every 2-3 years if no concerns arise until adulthood. Subsequently, routine cardiac examinations every five years are advisable. Additionally, patients with diagnosed cardiomyopathy should receive ongoing cardiac care to ensure the effective management and monitoring of their condition. A prospective study will be required to determine the true prevalence of cardiomyopathy in CDG.

#2

Unique clinical presentations and follow-up outcomes from experience with congenital disorders of glycosylation: PMM2-PGM1-DPAGT1-MPI-POMT2-B3GALNT2-DPM1-SRD5A3-CDG.

Journal of pediatric endocrinology &amp; metabolism : JPEM2023 Jun 27

Congenital Glycosylation Disorders (CDG) are a large group of inherited metabolic diseases with multi-organ involvement. Herein, we aimed to expand the clinical characteristics of patients with CDG based on our experience with diagnoses and follow-up of CDG patients from different subtypes. The clinical and laboratory findings from the last 15 years were reviewed retrospectively in Ege University Child Metabolism and Nutrition Department. There were 8 (57.2 %) females and 6 (42.8 %) males. Diagnoses of the patients were PMM2-CDG (n=4), PGM1-CDG (n=2), DPAGT1-CDG (n=2), SRD5A3-CDG (n=2), MPI-CDG (n=1), POMT2-CDG (n=1), B3GALNT2-CDG (n=1), DPM1-CDG (n=1). The clinical findings of the patients were dysmorphia (85.7 %), developmental delay (85.7 %), intellectual disability (85.7 %), ocular abnormalities (64.2 %), skeletal malformations (64.2 %), failure to thrive (57.1 %), microcephaly (57.1 %), hepatomegaly (35.7 %), hearing loss (35.7 %), seizures (28.5 %), gastrointestinal symptoms (21.4 %), endocrine abnormalities (21.4 %), and cardiac abnormalities (7.1 %). Laboratory findings were abnormal TIEF (92.8 %), abnormal liver enzymes (64.2 %), decreased protein C (64.2 %), decreased antithrombin III (64.2 %), decreased protein S (42.8 %), hypogammaglobulinemia (35.7 %), cerebellar hypoplasia (28.5 %), CK elevation (7.1 %), and hypoglycemia (7.1 %). This study contributes to the literature by sharing our ultra-rare DPM1-CDG case with less than 20 cases in the literature and expanding the clinical and molecular characteristics of other CDG patients. Hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia, short stature, hypothyroidism, growth hormone deficiency, hypogammaglobulinemia, pericardial effusion, elevated CK, congenital myasthenia, and anorectal malformation were unique findings that were observed. Cerebello-ocular findings accompanying multi-organ involvement were an essential clue for a possible CDG.

#3

Case Report: DPM1-CDG: Novel Variant with Severe Phenotype and Literature Review.

Frontiers in genetics2022

Background: Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) type I include variants in the DPM1 gene leading to DPM1-CDG. The nine previously reported patients showed developmental delay, seizures, electroencephalography abnormalities and dysmorphic features with varying disease onset and severity. Methods: Clinical features of a new patient are described. Whole exome sequencing using NGS was performed, followed by molecular simulation of the structural changes in the protein. Results: Our patient with DPM1-CDG presented with more severe symptoms and an earlier onset, specifically non-febrile seizures from the age of 3 weeks, global developmental delay, and severely retarded motor skills. She died at the age of 11 weeks after fulminant sepsis. We identified compound heterozygous variants in the DPM1 gene, one previously reported point mutation c.1A > C p.? as well as the novel variant c.239_241del p.(Lys80del), resulting in the first in-frame deletion located in exon 2. Loss of Lys80 may lead to an impaired α-helical configuration next to the GDP/GTP binding site. Conclusion: The presented case extends the spectrum of DPM1-CDG to a very young and severely affected child. The deletion of Lys80 in DPM1 results in an impaired helical configuration. This has implications for further understanding the association of structure and function of DPM1.

#4

A mutation in mannose-phosphate-dolichol utilization defect 1 reveals clinical symptoms of congenital disorders of glycosylation type I and dystroglycanopathy.

JIMD reports2019 Nov

Congenital disorders of glycosylation type I (CDG-I) are inborn errors of metabolism, generally characterized by multisystem clinical manifestations, including developmental delay, hepatopathy, hypotonia, and skin, skeletal, and neurological abnormalities. Among others, dolichol-phosphate-mannose (DPM) is the mannose donor for N-glycosylation as well as O-mannosylation. DOLK-CDG, DPM1-CDG, DPM2-CDG, and DPM3-CDG are defects in the DPM synthesis showing both CDG-I abnormalities and reduced O-mannosylation of alpha-dystroglycan (αDG), which leads to muscular dystrophy-dystroglycanopathy. Mannose-phosphate-dolichol utilization defect 1 (MPDU1) plays a role in the utilization of DPM. Here, we report two MPDU1-CDG patients without skin involvement, but with massive dilatation of the biliary duct system and dystroglycanopathy characteristics including hypotonia, elevated creatine kinase, dilated cardiomyopathy, buphthalmos, and congenital glaucoma. Biochemical analyses revealed elevated disialotransferrin in serum, and analyses in fibroblasts showed shortened lipid linked oligosaccharides and DPM, and reduced O-mannosylation of αDG. Thus, MPDU1-CDG can be added to the list of disorders with overlapping biochemical and clinical abnormalities of CDG-I and dystroglycanopathy. Mannose-phosphate-dolichol utilization defect 1 patients can have overlapping biochemical and clinical abnormalities of congenital disorders of glycosylation type I and dystroglycanopathy.

#5

DPAGT1-CDG: Functional analysis of disease-causing pathogenic mutations and role of endoplasmic reticulum stress.

PloS one2017

Pathogenic mutations in DPAGT1 are manifested as two possible phenotypes: congenital disorder of glycosylation DPAGT1-CDG (also known as CDG-Ij), and limb-girdle congenital myasthenic syndrome (CMS) with tubular aggregates. UDP-N-acetylglucosamine-dolichyl-phosphate N-acetylglucosamine phosphotransferase (GPT), the protein encoded by DPAGT1, is an endoplasmic reticulum (ER)-resident protein involved in an initial step in the N-glycosylation pathway. The aim of the present study was to examine the effect of six variants in DPAGT1 detected in patients with DPAGT1-CDG, and the role of endoplasmic reticulum stress, as part of the search for therapeutic strategies to use against DPAGT1-CDG. The effect of the six mutations, i.e., c.358C>A (p.Leu120Met), c.791T>G (p.Val264Gly), c.901C>T (p.Arg301Cys), c.902G>A (p.Arg301His), c.1154T>G (p.Leu385Arg), and of the novel mutation c.329T>C (p.Phe110Ser), were examined via the analysis of DPAGT1 transcriptional profiles and GTP levels in patient-derived fibroblasts. In addition, the transient expression of different mutations was analysed in COS-7 cells. The results obtained, together with those of bioinformatic studies, revealed these mutations to affect the splicing process, the stability of GTP, or the ability of this protein to correctly localise in the ER membrane. The unfolded protein response (UPR; the response to ER stress) was found not to be active in patient-derived fibroblasts, unlike that seen in cells from patients with PMM2-CDG or DPM1-CDG. Even so, the fibroblasts of patients with DPAGT1-CDG seemed to be more sensitive to the stressor tunicamycin. The present work improves our knowledge of DPAGT1-CDG and provides bases for developing tailored splicing and folding therapies.

Publicações recentes

Ver todas no PubMed

Associações

Organizações que acompanham esta doença — pra ter apoio e orientação

Ainda não temos associações cadastradas para DPM1-CDG.

É de uma associação que acompanha esta doença? Fale com a gente →

Comunidades

Grupos ativos de quem convive com esta doença aqui no Raras

Ainda não existe comunidade no Raras para DPM1-CDG

Pacientes, familiares e cuidadores se organizam em comunidades pra compartilhar experiências, fazer perguntas e se apoiar. Você pode ser o primeiro.

Tire suas dúvidas

Perguntas, dicas e experiências compartilhadas aqui na página

Participe da discussão

Faça login para postar dúvidas, compartilhar experiências e interagir com especialistas.

Fazer login

Doenças relacionadas

Doenças com sintomas parecidos — ajudam quem ainda está buscando diagnóstico

Ordenadas pelo número de sintomas em comum.

Referências e fontes

Bases de dados externas citadas neste artigo

Publicações científicas

Artigos indexados no PubMed ligados a esta doença no grafo RarasNet — título, periódico e PMID direto da fonte, sem intermediação de IA.

  1. Cardiomyopathy, an uncommon phenotype of congenital disorders of glycosylation: Recommendations for baseline screening and follow-up evaluation.
    Molecular genetics and metabolism· 2024· PMID 38917675mais citado
  2. Unique clinical presentations and follow-up outcomes from experience with congenital disorders of glycosylation: PMM2-PGM1-DPAGT1-MPI-POMT2-B3GALNT2-DPM1-SRD5A3-CDG.
    Journal of pediatric endocrinology &amp; metabolism : JPEM· 2023· PMID 37042760mais citado
  3. Case Report: DPM1-CDG: Novel Variant with Severe Phenotype and Literature Review.
    Frontiers in genetics· 2022· PMID 35910228mais citado
  4. A mutation in mannose-phosphate-dolichol utilization defect 1 reveals clinical symptoms of congenital disorders of glycosylation type I and dystroglycanopathy.
    JIMD reports· 2019· PMID 31741824mais citado
  5. DPAGT1-CDG: Functional analysis of disease-causing pathogenic mutations and role of endoplasmic reticulum stress.
    PloS one· 2017· PMID 28662078mais citado

Bases de dados e fontes oficiais

Identificadores e referências canônicas usadas para montar este verbete.

  1. ORPHA:79322(Orphanet)
  2. OMIM OMIM:608799(OMIM)
  3. MONDO:0012123(MONDO)
  4. GARD:9831(GARD (NIH))
  5. Variantes catalogadas(ClinVar)
  6. Busca completa no PubMed(PubMed)
  7. Q66299822(Wikidata)

Dados compilados pelo RarasNet a partir de fontes abertas (Orphanet, OMIM, MONDO, PubMed/EuropePMC, ClinicalTrials.gov, DATASUS, PCDT/MS). Este conteúdo é informativo e não substitui avaliação médica.

Conteúdo mantido por Agente Raras · Médicos e pesquisadores podem colaborar

Compêndio · Raras BR

DPM1-CDG

ORPHA:79322 · MONDO:0012123
Prevalência
<1 / 1 000 000
Casos
9 casos conhecidos
Herança
Autosomal recessive
CID-10
E77.8 · Outros distúrbios do metabolismo de glicoproteínas
CID-11
Início
Infancy, Neonatal
Prevalência
0.0 (Worldwide)
MedGen
UMLS
C1837396
EuropePMC
Wikidata
Papers 10a
DiscussaoAtiva

Nenhuma novidade ainda. O agente esta monitorando.

0membros
0novidades