Bestudering van transferrienglikosilering as 'n merker vir glikosileringsdefekte
Abstract
The CDG-syndromes, usually characterised by psychomotor retardation, is a newly
described group of diseases and no case has yet been described in South Africa. The
purpose of this study was the development of a standard method for studying of the
glycosylation of transferrin as a marker for glycosylation defects and the application of
the method to South African patients.
Transferrin shows a degree of microheterogeneity due to differences in carbohydrate
composition of the N-glycans bound to the peptide and is therefore very useful in the
study of glycosylation defects. !so-electric focusing (IEF) is often used in the study of
transferrin glycosylation. An IEF-technique was developed to study transferrin patterns;
transferrin of a number of different control persons was studied and the known transferrin
pattern in normal people (high levels of tetrasialotransferrin, with lower levels of tri-, di- and pentasialotransferrin, respectively) was observed in these controls. To validate this
standardised IEF-technique for this study, transferrin from a number of different
alcoholics was analysed and the characteristic abnormal transferrin pattern with raised
levels of disialotransferrin and also asialotransferrin, was observed in these patients. The
transferrin of seventeen possible CDG-cases was analysed and in four of these, abnormal
patterns were observed. Patient ES showed a pattern corresponding to patterns of
positive controls of CDG type 1, while another patient (patient ST) showed transferrin
patterns corresponding to known patterns for CDG type 3. A patient (patient SN) whose
transferrin pattern corresponds to known patterns for CDG type 2, was also identified and
in another case (patient DL), a previously unknown but unmistakeably abnormal
transferrin pattern was observed. Unfortunately, clinical histories of all of these cases are
not at all complete and further studies (including enzyme analyses) will have to be
performed to verify these results.