Title : Neuraminidase deficiency in the original patient with the Goldberg syndrome - Thomas_1979_Clin.Genet_16_323 |
Author(s) : Thomas GH , Goldberg MF , Miller CS , Reynolds LW |
Ref : Clin Genet , 16 :323 , 1979 |
Abstract :
Homogenates of cultured skin fibroblasts from a non-ambulatory, 20-year-old male with cherry-red spots, corneal clouding, seizures, mental retardation, dysostosis multiplex, dwarfism, coarse facies and loss of vision, originally described by Goldberg et al. (1971), have diminished neuraminidase activity and an excess of neuraminic acid-rich compounds. Specifically, these cells have 2-17% normal neuraminidase when measured with 2-(3' methoxyphenyl)-N-acetyl-alpha-neuraminic acid, N-acetyl-neuramin-lactose and fetuin. Activities of 12 other lysosomal enzymes were either at or above the range of normal control fibroblasts. Total neuraminic acid concentration was 44.3 nmol/mg protein versus an average control value of 14.2. It is concluded that the Goldberg syndrome should be considered, along with mucolipidosis I and the cherry-red spot -- myoclonus syndrome, as resulting from a primary neuraminidase deficiency. |
PubMedSearch : Thomas_1979_Clin.Genet_16_323 |
PubMedID: 519904 |
Gene_locus related to this paper: human-CTSA |
Gene_locus | human-CTSA |
Disease | Galactosialidosis |
Thomas GH, Goldberg MF, Miller CS, Reynolds LW (1979)
Neuraminidase deficiency in the original patient with the Goldberg syndrome
Clin Genet
16 :323
Thomas GH, Goldberg MF, Miller CS, Reynolds LW (1979)
Clin Genet
16 :323