Back to Search Start Over

Pathogenic Variants in CEP85L Cause Sporadic and Familial Posterior Predominant Lissencephaly

Authors :
Michele G. Mehaffey
Mei-Feng Wu
Edith P. Almanza Fuerte
Laura A. Jansen
Ingrid E. Scheffer
Wen-Hung Chung
Michael S. Hildebrand
Meng-Han Tsai
Paul J. Lockhart
Richard J. Leventer
Wen-Lang Fan
Heather C Mefford
Ying-Chao Chang
Chung-Kin Chan
Nian-Hsin Chao
Alison M. Muir
William B. Dobyns
Shih-Chi Su
Kheng Seang Lim
Guillaume Sébire
Nicolas Deconinck
Won Jing Wang
Ching Ching Ng
Kate Riney
Kun-Chuan Yang
Samuel F. Berkovic
Jin Wu Tsai
John A. Damiano
Yi-Ning Kang
Brenda E. Porter
Ghayda M. Mirzaa
Source :
Neuron
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Lissencephaly (LIS), denoting a "smooth brain," is characterized by the absence of normal cerebral convolutions with abnormalities of cortical thickness. Pathogenic variants in over 20 genes are associated with LIS. The majority of posterior predominant LIS is caused by pathogenic variants in LIS1 (also known as PAFAH1B1), although a significant fraction remains without a known genetic etiology. We now implicate CEP85L as an important cause of posterior predominant LIS, identifying 13 individuals with rare, heterozygous CEP85L variants, including 2 families with autosomal dominant inheritance. We show that CEP85L is a centrosome protein localizing to the pericentriolar material, and knockdown of Cep85l causes a neuronal migration defect in mice. LIS1 also localizes to the centrosome, suggesting that this organelle is key to the mechanism of posterior predominant LIS.

Details

ISSN :
10974199
Volume :
106
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neuron
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ae49aa1a166f0ed682c399f4f54c45c7