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Natural history study of hepatic glycogen storage disease type IV and comparison to Gbe1ys/ys model
Rebecca L. Koch, Bridget T. Kiely, Su Jin Choi, William R. Jeck, Leticia S. Flores, Vikrant Sood, Seema Alam, Gilda Porta, Katy LaVecchio, Claudia Soler-Alfonso, Priya S. Kishnani
Rebecca L. Koch, Bridget T. Kiely, Su Jin Choi, William R. Jeck, Leticia S. Flores, Vikrant Sood, Seema Alam, Gilda Porta, Katy LaVecchio, Claudia Soler-Alfonso, Priya S. Kishnani
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Clinical Research and Public Health Genetics Hepatology

Natural history study of hepatic glycogen storage disease type IV and comparison to Gbe1ys/ys model

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Abstract

Background Glycogen storage disease type IV (GSD IV) is an ultrarare autosomal recessive disorder that causes deficiency of functional glycogen branching enzyme and formation of abnormally structured glycogen termed polyglucosan. GSD IV has traditionally been categorized based on primary hepatic or neuromuscular involvement, with hepatic GSD IV subclassified as discrete subtypes: classic (progressive) and nonprogressive.Methods To better understand the progression of liver disease in GSD IV, we present clinical and histopathology data from 23 patients from around the world and characterized the liver involvement in the Gbe1ys/ys knockin mouse model.Results We propose an alternative to the established subtype-based terminology for characterizing liver disease in GSD IV and recognize 3 tiers of disease severity: (i) “severe progressive” liver disease, (ii) “intermediate progressive” liver disease, and (iii) “attenuated” liver disease. Analysis of liver pathology revealed that risk for liver failure cannot be predicted from liver biopsy findings alone in individuals affected by GSD IV. Moreover, analysis of postmortem liver pathology from an individual who died over 40 years after being diagnosed with nonprogressive hepatic GSD IV in childhood verified that liver fibrosis did not regress. Last, characterization of the liver involvement in a mouse model known to recapitulate the adult-onset neurodegenerative form of GSD IV (Gbe1ys/ys mouse model) demonstrated hepatic disease.Conclusion Our findings challenge the established subtype-based view of GSD IV and suggest that liver disease severity among patients with GSD IV represents a disease continuum.Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02683512Funding None

Authors

Rebecca L. Koch, Bridget T. Kiely, Su Jin Choi, William R. Jeck, Leticia S. Flores, Vikrant Sood, Seema Alam, Gilda Porta, Katy LaVecchio, Claudia Soler-Alfonso, Priya S. Kishnani

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Figure 3

Gbe1ys/ys mice exhibit liver involvement.

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Gbe1ys/ys mice exhibit liver involvement.
(A) Liver weight (LW) was nor...
(A) Liver weight (LW) was normalized to body weight (BW) as a quantitative marker of hepatomegaly. LW/BW was significantly increased in Gbe1ys/ys mice at all time points compared with wild-type (WT) levels (Gbe1ys/ys: 1-month n = 5, 3-month n = 9, 6-month n = 8, 9-month n = 8, 12-month n = 7; WT: 1-month n = 8, 3-month n = 7, 6-month n = 7, 9-month n = 9, 12-month n = 7). (B) Glycogen content in the liver was significantly elevated in Gbe1ys/ys mice at all time points compared with WT levels (Gbe1ys/ys: n = 5 at each time point; WT: 1-month n = 5, 3-month n = 5, 6-month n = 5, 9-month n = 4, 12-month n = 5). (C) Serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels were significantly elevated in Gbe1ys/ys mice compared with WT levels starting at 3 months of age (Gbe1ys/ys: 1-month n = 5, 3-month, n = 5, 6-month n = 5, 9-month n = 9, 12-month n = 9; WT: 1-month n = 5, 3-month n = 7, 6-month n = 4, 9-month n = 4, 12-month n = 5). Data presented as mean ± SD. Parametric unpaired t tests (2 tailed) were used to determine differences between Gbe1ys/ys and WT mice. *indicates P < 0.05 (considered statistically significant), **indicates P < 0.01, ***indicates P < 0.001. (D) Representative images of liver histology slides stained with H&E. (E) Zoomed view of black box region in corresponding image from D. (F) Representative images of liver histology slides stained with periodic acid–Schiff with diastase treatment. (G) Zoomed view of black box region in corresponding image from F. (H) Representative images of liver histology slides stained with Masson’s trichrome. (I) Zoomed view of black box region in corresponding image from H. Scale bar for panels D, F, and H = 50 μm and for panels E, G, and I = 250 µm.

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