Infantile globoid cell leukodystrophy (GLD, Krabbe disease) is a fatal demyelinating disorder caused by a deficiency in the lysosomal enzyme galactosylceramidase (GALC).
Here, we identify a spontaneous mutation in GALC, GALCtwi-5J, that precisely matches the E130K missense mutation in patients with infantile Krabbe disease.
Because neither galactocerebrosidase activity nor most genotypes reliably predict phenotype, the World Wide Registry was developed to determine whether other clinical/neurodiagnostic data could predict early infantile Krabbe disease in the newborn screening population.
Pathology and analytical biochemistry were qualitatively identical to, but generally much milder than, that seen in the typical infantile globoid cell leukodystrophy (GLD) in man (Krabbe disease) and in several other mammalian species, due to genetic deficiency of lysosomal galactosylceramidase (GALC) (EC 3.2.1.46).
Previously, we had identified a large deletion in the GALC gene together with a C to T polymorphism at cDNA position 502 in a significant number of cases of infantile Krabbe disease; however, the deletion breakpoint had not been found.