Lorne E Seargeant

Lorne E Seargeant
  • PhD FCACB
  • University of Manitoba

About

61
Publications
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Introduction
Current institution
University of Manitoba

Publications

Publications (61)
Article
Full-text available
Congenital disorders of glycosylation (CDG) are a group of metabolic diseases resulting from defects in glycan synthesis or processing. The number of subgroups and their phenotypic spectrums continue to expand with most related to deficiencies of N-glycosylation. ALG9-CDG (previously CDG-IL) is the result of a mutation in ALG9. This gene encodes th...
Article
Menkes disease is a rare, X-linked recessive disorder of the ATP7A gene, a copper transporter; resulting in systemic copper deficiency. The deficient function of copper-dependent enzymes manifests clinically with failure to thrive, seizures, hypotonia, coarse hair, connective tissue abnormalities, and neurodegeneration. Cerebral arteries are often...
Article
Full-text available
Unlabelled: The case of a 66 year-old female - the oldest known living patient with Niemann-Pick disease type C (NP-C) who remains free of any neurological or psychiatric manifestations 18 years after presentation - is presented. An incidental finding of massive splenomegaly was detected during a routine pelvic ultrasound. The pathology report aft...
Article
Full-text available
Sialic acid storage disease (Salla disease) is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by mutations in a lysosomal sialic acid export protein, SLC17A5 (OMIM #604369). This disorder was initially described in Northern Finland but more recently has been reported in patients of other ethnicities. We describe the clinical presentation and the neuroimagi...
Article
Full-text available
Investigation of seven patients from three families suspected of a fatty acid oxidation defect showed mean CPT-I enzyme activity of 5.9+/-4.9 percent of normal controls. The families, two Inuit, one First Nation, live in areas of Canada geographically very distant from each other. The CPT1 and CPT2 genes were fully sequenced in 5 of the patients. A...
Article
We describe the second case of congenital disorder of glycosylation type IL (CDG-IL) caused by deficiency of the ALG9 a1,2 mannosyltransferase enzyme. The female infant's features included psychomotor retardation, seizures, hypotonia, diffuse brain atrophy with delayed myelination, failure to thrive, pericardial effusion, cystic renal disease, hepa...
Article
Full-text available
The C677T MTHFR variant has been associated with the same third trimester pregnancy complications as seen in women who have elevations of maternal serum alpha-fetoprotein (MSAFP). We hypothesized that these women with third trimester pregnancy complications and MSAFP elevations would have an increased frequency of the variant compared to an abnorma...
Article
Glutaric acidemia type 1 (GA1) is overrepresented in the aboriginal population of Island Lake, Manitoba, and northwestern Ontario who speak the Ojibway-Cree (Oji-Cree) dialect. The carrier frequency in these communities has been predicted to be as high as 1 in 10 individuals. Prior to beginning newborn screening for GA1 in May 1998, 18 of 20 affect...
Article
The spectrum of clinical presentation of fatty acid oxidation defects (FAOD) continues to expand. One FAOD, L-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase (LCHAD) deficiency has been associated with liver disease in pregnancies involving a heterozygous mother carrying an affected fetus. Hepatic carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT I) deficiency typically present...
Article
We describe three unrelated patients who were the offspring of mothers on unrestricted diets and presented with signs and symptoms consistent with either an acquired or inborn error of B12 metabolism. All were solely breast-fed. All three children showed good recovery after B12 replacement, although mild hypotonia still persists in the 3rd patient....
Article
We report that measurement of whole-blood palmitate oxidation is a rapid and inexpensive screening test for fatty acid oxidation defects. The assay has been adapted from published assays using cultured fibroblasts or isolated white blood cells. Micro whole-blood samples are incubated with tritiated palmitic acid as substrate. The tritiated water pr...
Article
We report that measurement of whole‐blood palmitate oxidation is a rapid and inexpensive screening test for fatty acid oxidation defects. The assay has been adapted from published assays using cultured fibroblasts or isolated white blood cells. Micro whole‐blood samples are incubated with tritiated palmitic acid as substrate. The tritiated water pr...
Article
To describe the clinical and biologic features of neuroblastoma (NB) in two siblings and their maternal second cousin. NB was diagnosed in the siblings at 2 1/2 (patient 2) and 5 (patient 3) years of age. NB was diagnosed in their maternal second cousin (patient 1) when she was 7 years old. Standard clinical and biological data, tumor karyotype, an...
Article
We characterized the pyruvate carboxylase (PC) gene by PCR amplification, subcloning, and sequencing. The coding region has 19 exons and 18 introns spanning approximately 16 kb of genomic DNA. Screening both the cDNA and the gene of individuals with the simple A form of PC deficiency revealed an 1828G-->A missense mutation in 11 Ojibwa and 2 Cree p...
Article
Aspartylglucosaminuria (AGU) is a lysosomal storage disease caused by deficiency of aspartylglucosaminidase. The disease is overrepresented in the Finnish population, in which one missense mutation (Cys163Ser) is responsible for 98% of the disease alleles. The few non-Finnish cases of AGU which have been analyzed at molecular level have revealed a...
Article
Introduction: Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) deficiency, the most frequent disorder of fatty acid β-oxidation, can cause episodic hypoglycemia, Reye-like encephalopathy and sudden death. A single mutation in the MCAD gene, K329E, has been associated with most cases of this disease. Consequently, unlike most other genetic disorders which...
Article
Full-text available
Blood concentrations of lactate normally increase during and after intense exercise as does the ratio of concentrations of lactate to pyruvate (L:P). Since there appear to be differences in blood lactate concentrations on exercise, in muscle metabolic enzyme activities, and in anaerobic capacity between children and adults, we speculated that there...
Article
We have discovered a single homoallelic nucleotide substitution as the putative cause of the perinatal (lethal) form of hypophosphatasia in Canadian Mennonites. Previous linkage and haplotype analysis in this population suggested that a single mutational event was responsible for this autosomal recessive form of hypophosphatasia. The mutation is a...
Article
We describe two brothers with 5,10-methylene tetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) deficiency. The younger patient first developed limb weakness, incoordination, paresthesiae, and memory lapses at age 15 years, and by his early twenties he was wheelchair bound. His older brother remains asymptomatic at age 37 years. Both had homocystinuria and homocys...
Article
The authors have discovered a single homoallelic nucleotide substitution as the putative cause of the perinatal (lethal) form of hypophosphatasia in Canadian Mennonites. Previous linkage and haplotype analysis in this population suggested that a single mutational event was responsible for this autosomal recessive form of hypophosphatasia. The mutat...
Article
We describe hepatic carnitine palmitoyltransferase (CPT I) deficiency in three children (a brother and sister and their second cousin) from an extended inbred Hutterite kindred. The patients were first seen between 8 and 18 months of age with recurrent episodes of hypoketotic hypoglycemia accompanied by a decreased level of consciousness and hepato...
Article
Cultured interleukin 2 (IL-2)-dependent leukocytes from 13 patients with glutaric aciduria type I, 12 obligate carriers, 105 family members and 31 normal controls were assayed for glutaryl-CoA dehydrogenase activity. Of the 13 affected patients, 10 (all Ojibway Indian) had residual enzyme activity (2-13% of control) and 3 patients (all non-Indian)...
Article
Aspartylglycosaminuria (AGU) (McKusick 208400) is a rare recessively inherited inborn error of glycoprotein degradation caused by deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme aspartylglucosaminidase (L-aspartamido-fi-N-acetylglucosamine amidohydrolase, EC 3.5.1.26) which cleaves the linkages between N-acetylglucosamine and asparagine found in glycopeptides....
Article
We have diagnosed type I glutaric aciduria (GA-I) in 14 children from 7 Old Order Amish families in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania. An otherwise rare disorder, GA-I appears to be a common cause of acute encephalopathy and cerebral palsy among the Amish. The natural history of the disease, which was previously unrecognized in this population, is rem...
Article
Full-text available
To compare the prevalence of hereditary metabolic diseases in the native and non-native populations of Manitoba and northwestern Ontario. Retrospective analysis. Children's Hospital, Winnipeg. Patients were selected by three methods: laboratory tests designed to screen patients suspected of having a metabolic disease, laboratory investigation of ne...
Article
Twenty obligate carriers of infantile hypophosphatasia (HOPS), a severe autosomal recessive metabolic bone disorder, were studied and compared with 36 controls. Decreased serum alkaline phosphatase activity and increased urinary phosphoethanolamine excretion were confirmed in the HOPS carriers. Relative hyperphosphatemia was documented for the firs...
Article
We measured plasma levels of pyridoxal-5'-phosphate (PLP), a cofactor form of vitamin B6 and apparent natural substrate for alkaline phosphatase (ALP), in carriers and in non-carriers of the severe perinatal and infantile forms of hypophosphatasia, both before and after an oral load of pyridoxine (i.e. 1/3 mg/kg body weight). The assignment of carr...
Article
In July 1983, the Manitoba Perinatal Screening Programme modified its existing procedure for neonatal screening for galactosemia by introducing quantitation of total galactose plus galactose-1-phosphate from dried blood spots using the Multistat centrifugal analyzer. The first 4 years of experience with this method in combination with the Beutler s...
Article
We report two brothers with a previously undescribed type of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy and associated aminoacidopathy. Both have growth failure, progressive intellectual decline, deafness, neurologic dysfunction, exercise intolerance, lactic acidosis, and abnormal plasma and cerebrospinal fluid amino acid levels (elevated levels of alanine an...
Article
In a retrospective analysis of 24 cases of congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) in neonates born in the province of Manitoba during the last 20 years, we set out to determine whether patients, in particular male infants with salt-losing CAH, were being missed by the usual forms of clinical ascertainment. Although the overall incidence of 1/14,500 l...
Article
In a retrospective analysis of 24 cases of congenital adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) in neonates born in the province of Manitoba during the last 20 years, we set out to determine whether patients, in particular male infants with salt-losing CAH, were being missed by the usual forms of clinical ascertainment. Although the overall incidence of 1/14,500 l...
Article
The continuous infusion of cytarabine, daunorubicin, and etoposide offers several theoretical advantages over bolus infusion in the treatment of acute nonlymphocytic leukemia. To date, this approach has been limited by the need for three separate iv lines. The in vitro stability and compatibility of these three agents were therefore evaluated. Solu...
Article
Linkage analysis of six nuclear families with infantile hypophosphatasia which were informative for the Rh blood group locus was performed. The maximum combined lod score was 4.76 with the recombinant distance (theta) of 0.04. These preliminary data provide evidence for linkage between the genes for infantile hypophosphatasia and the Rh blood group...
Article
We described a case of complete trisomy 12p syndrome (non-mosaic) originating de novo in a first born child to healthy 26 year old nonconsanguineous parents. The 12p syndrome has been confirmed by clinical, cytogenetic and gene dosage studies.
Article
We describe an inborn error of vitamin B12 metabolism in an infant who had severe developmental delay, megaloblastic anemia, and homocystinuria. There was no evidence of methylmalonic aciduria or deficiency of folate or vitamin B12. Treatment with hydroxocobalamin, but not with cyanocobalamin and folic acid, resulted in rapid clinical and biochemic...
Article
The alkaline phosphatases present in the human tissues liver, kidney, intestine, placenta and a serum from a patient with Paget's disease of bone have been purified to apparent homogeneity by affinity elution from a phosphonic acid-Sepharose derivative. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in SDS gave subunit molecular weights ranging from 74 000 for...
Article
The number of structural gene loci that code for the different molecular forms of human alkaline phosphatase is unknown. Physical properties of the enzymes, immunological data, chemical inhibition and genetic studies suggest that at least three structural genes are involved: one coding for alkaline phosphatase from placenta, another for the enzyme...
Article
Full-text available
Orthovanadate was shown to be a potent competitive inhibitor (Ki less than 1 microM) of purified alkaline phosphatase from human liver, intestine of kidney. Inhibition was reversed and full enzymic activity restored in the presence of 1mM-adrenaline. Phosphate and vanadate competed for the same binding site on the enzyme.
Article
Kinetic parameters for the hydrolysis of a number of physiologically important phosphoesters by purified human liver alkaline phosphatase have been determined. The enzyme was studied at pH values of 7.0 to 10.0. The affinity of the enzyme for the compounds was determined by competition experiments and by their direct employment as substrates. Phosp...
Article
The compound p-aminobenzylphosphonic acid has been coupled via an azo linkage to tyraminyl-Sepharose 4B. This derivative at pH 6.0 bound most of the protein and all of the alkaline phosphatase in a crude preparation from human liver. The phosphatase was selectively eluted with the substrate 2-naphthylphosphate and a purification of 400-fold obtaine...
Article
Full-text available
Alkaline phosphatase from human liver was purified to homogeneity. The purification procedure included solubilization with butanol, fractionation with acetone, and chromatography on concanavalin A-Sepharose, DEAE-cellulose, Sephadex G-200 and DEAE-Sephadex. Purity was established by standard and sodium dodecyl sulphate/polyacrylamide-gel electropho...
Article
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Alberta, 1979. Includes bibliography.

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