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SLC39A8 Deficiency: A Disorder of Manganese Transport and Glycosylation

TLDR
Variants in SLC39A8 impair the function of manganese-dependent enzymes, most notably β-1,4-galactosyltransferase, a Golgi enzyme essential for biosynthesis of the carbohydrate part of glycoproteins that leads to a severe disorder with deformed skull, severe seizures, short limbs, profound psychomotor retardation, and hearing loss.
Abstract
SLC39A8 is a membrane transporter responsible for manganese uptake into the cell. Via whole-exome sequencing, we studied a child that presented with cranial asymmetry, severe infantile spasms with hypsarrhythmia, and dysproportionate dwarfism. Analysis of transferrin glycosylation revealed severe dysglycosylation corresponding to a type II congenital disorder of glycosylation (CDG) and the blood manganese levels were below the detection limit. The variants c.112G>C (p.Gly38Arg) and c.1019T>A (p.Ile340Asn) were identified in SLC39A8. A second individual with the variants c.97G>A (p.Val33Met) and c.1004G>C (p.Ser335Thr) on the paternal allele and c.610G>T (p.Gly204Cys) on the maternal allele was identified among a group of unresolved case subjects with CDG. These data demonstrate that variants in SLC39A8 impair the function of manganese-dependent enzymes, most notably β-1,4-galactosyltransferase, a Golgi enzyme essential for biosynthesis of the carbohydrate part of glycoproteins. Impaired galactosylation leads to a severe disorder with deformed skull, severe seizures, short limbs, profound psychomotor retardation, and hearing loss. Oral galactose supplementation is a treatment option and results in complete normalization of glycosylation. SLC39A8 deficiency links a trace element deficiency with inherited glycosylation disorders.

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Common schizophrenia alleles are enriched in mutation-intolerant genes and in regions under strong background selection

Antonio F. Pardiñas, +90 more
- 26 Feb 2018 - 
TL;DR: A new genome-wide association study of schizophrenia is reported, and through meta-analysis with existing data and integrating genomic fine-mapping with brain expression and chromosome conformation data, 50 novel associated loci and 145 loci are identified.
Journal ArticleDOI

The essential metals for humans: a brief overview

TL;DR: The human body needs about 20 essential elements in order to function properly and among them, for certain, 10 are metal elements, though for every metal we do need, there is another one in our body we could do without it as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Zinc as a Gatekeeper of Immune Function

TL;DR: Molecular mechanisms underlying the development of a pro-inflammatory phenotype during zinc deficiency are reported, and links between altered zinc homeostasis and disease development are described, ensuring the benefits of zinc supplementation for a malfunctioning immune system become clear.
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Pathway paradigms revealed from the genetics of inflammatory bowel disease.

TL;DR: IBD is described as a model disease in the context of leveraging human genetics to dissect interactions in cellular and molecular pathways that regulate homeostasis of the mucosal immune system and future prospects for disease-subtype classification and therapeutic intervention are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Functions of Metallothionein and ZIP and ZnT Transporters: An Overview and Perspective

TL;DR: The present review updates current understanding of the biological functions of MTs and ZIP and ZnT transporters from several new perspectives.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

MutationTaster2: mutation prediction for the deep-sequencing age

TL;DR: This method takes advantage of the high hybridization efficiency of FISH and the fact that base-pair resolution is usually not needed to uniquely identify a transcript, and will enable the transcriptome to be directly imaged at single-cell resolution in complex samples such as brain tissue.
Journal ArticleDOI

Zinc transporters and the cellular trafficking of zinc

TL;DR: The current knowledge of zinc transport systems in eukaryotes is the focus of this review.
Journal ArticleDOI

Analysis and update of the human solute carrier (SLC) gene superfamily

TL;DR: The solute-carrier gene (SLC) superfamily encodes membrane-bound transporters, located in all cellular and organelle membranes, except, perhaps, the nuclear membrane, and it is likely that drugs, non-essential metals and many other environmental toxicants are able to 'hitch-hike' on one or another of these transporrs, thereby enabling these moieties to enter (or leave) the cell.
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