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American Journal of Human Genetics logoLink to American Journal of Human Genetics
. 1998 Apr;62(4):785–791. doi: 10.1086/301790

Mutations in the liver glycogen phosphorylase gene (PYGL) underlying glycogenosis type VI.

B Burwinkel 1, H D Bakker 1, E Herschkovitz 1, S W Moses 1, Y S Shin 1, M W Kilimann 1
PMCID: PMC1377030  PMID: 9529348

Abstract

Deficiency of glycogen phosphorylase in the liver gives rise to glycogen-storage disease type VI (Hers disease; MIM 232700). We report the identification of the first mutations in PYGL, the gene encoding the liver isoform of glycogen phosphorylase, in three patients with Hers disease. These are two splice-site mutations and two missense mutations. A mutation of the 5' splice-site consensus of intron 14 causes the retention of intron 14 and the utilization of two illegitimate 5' splice sites, whereas a mutation of the 3' splice-site consensus of intron 4 causes the skipping of exon 5. Two missense mutations, N338S and N376K, both cause nonconservative replacements of amino acids that are absolutely conserved even in yeast and bacterial phosphorylases. We also report corrections of the PYGL coding sequence, sequence polymorphisms, and a partial PYGL gene structure with introns in the same positions as in PYGM, the gene of the muscle isoform of phosphorylase. Our findings demonstrate that PYGL mutations cause Hers disease, and they may improve laboratory diagnosis of deficiencies of the liver phosphorylase system.

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Selected References

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