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Elucidation of the phenotypic spectrum and genetic landscape in primary and secondary microcephaly

Authors :
Joana Figueiro-Silva
Reza Asadollahi
Ratna Dua Puri
Heinrich Sticht
Lance H. Rodan
Michael Papik
Beatrice Oneda
Anselm H. C. Horn
Sharyn A. Lincoln
Paranchai Boonsawat
Katharina Steindl
Ishwar C. Verma
Beatrice Latal
Laura Gogoll
Anita Rauch
Pascal Joset
Séverine Drunat
Oskar G. Jenni
Dunja Niedrist
Frenny Sheth
Markus Zweier
Alain Verloes
Robert Steinfeld
Dennis Kraemer
Chaitanya Datar
Barbara Plecko
Silvia Azzarello-Burri
Marcella Zollino
Ruxandra Bachmann-Gagescu
Rahim Masood
Sandrine Passemard
Source :
Genetics in Medicine
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2019.

Abstract

Purpose\ud Microcephaly is a sign of many genetic conditions but has been rarely systematically evaluated. We therefore comprehensively studied the clinical and genetic landscape of an unselected cohort of patients with microcephaly.\ud Methods\ud We performed clinical assessment, high-resolution chromosomal microarray analysis, exome sequencing, and functional studies in 62 patients (58% with primary microcephaly [PM], 27% with secondary microcephaly [SM], and 15% of unknown onset).\ud Results\ud We found severity of developmental delay/intellectual disability correlating with severity of microcephaly in PM, but not SM. We detected causative variants in 48.4% of patients and found divergent inheritance and variant pattern for PM (mainly recessive and likely gene-disrupting [LGD]) versus SM (all dominant de novo and evenly LGD or missense). While centrosome-related pathways were solely identified in PM, transcriptional regulation was the most frequently affected pathway in both SM and PM. Unexpectedly, we found causative variants in different mitochondria-related genes accounting for ~5% of patients, which emphasizes their role even in syndromic PM. Additionally, we delineated novel candidate genes involved in centrosome-related pathway (SPAG5, TEDC1), Wnt signaling (VPS26A, ZNRF3), and RNA trafficking (DDX1).\ud Conclusion\ud Our findings enable improved evaluation and genetic counseling of PM and SM patients and further elucidate microcephaly pathways.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10983600
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genetics in Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....485bb5c147b1de5a79d2baef621641c5