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Andrew Dauber, Altan Ercan, Jack Lee, Philip James, Pieter P. Jacobs, David J. Ashline, Sophie R. Wang, Timothy Miller, Joel N. Hirschhorn, Peter A. Nigrovic, Robert Sackstein, Congenital disorder of fucosylation type 2c (LADII) presenting with short stature and developmental delay with minimal adhesion defect, Human Molecular Genetics, Volume 23, Issue 11, 1 June 2014, Pages 2880–2887, https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/ddu001
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Abstract
Leukocyte adhesion deficiency type II is a hereditary disorder of neutrophil migration caused by mutations in the guanosine diphosphate-fucose transporter gene (SLC35C1). In these patients, inability to generate key fucosylated molecules including sialyl Lewis X leads to leukocytosis and recurrent infections, in addition to short stature and developmental delay. We report two brothers with short stature and developmental delay who are compound heterozygotes for novel mutations in SLC35C1 resulting in partial in vivo defects in fucosylation. Specifically, plasma glycoproteins including immunoglobulin G demonstrated marked changes in glycoform distribution. While neutrophil rolling on endothelial selectins was partially impeded, residual adhesion proved sufficient to avoid leukocytosis or recurrent infection. These findings demonstrate a surprising degree of immune redundancy in the face of substantial alterations in adhesion molecule expression, and show that short stature and developmental delay may be the sole presenting signs in this disorder.
- cell adhesion molecules
- mutation
- leukocyte-adhesion deficiency syndrome
- platelet adhesion
- genetic disorder
- glycoproteins
- adhesions
- antigens, cd15
- diphosphates
- endothelium
- fucose
- genes
- granulocytes
- guanosine
- heterozygote
- leukocytosis
- membrane transport proteins
- neutrophil infiltration
- neutrophils
- plasma
- polysaccharides
- selectins
- immunoglobulin g
- recurrent infection
- short stature
- developmental delay
- leukocyte adhesion deficiency - type 2
- redundancy
- congenital disorders
- molecule