98%
921
2 minutes
20
Background And Objectives: Genetic primary microcephaly (PM) is a defect in early brain development leading to congenital microcephaly, mostly recessively inherited, and mild-to-moderate intellectual disability. PM has been largely elucidated, thanks to exome and genome sequencing. However, radial microbrain, the most severe form of genetic PM or micrencephaly described in the 1980s, which leads to early lethality or very severe intellectual handicap, remains without a molecular diagnosis. We sought to identify the cause of radial microbrain by analyzing the genotype of children/adults and fetuses with an extremely small brain.
Methods: We searched for individuals with the smallest head circumference among patients with a confirmed diagnosis of PM included in 2 French and European observational studies coordinated at the Robert Debré Children's Hospital in Paris. Their neurodevelopment and brain imaging were analyzed, as well as next-generation sequencing for a panel of microcephaly genes or exome sequencing. Neuropathologic and immunohistologic analyses of extremely severe microcephalic fetal brains and stage-matched controls were performed. A nonparametric test and Mann-Whitney post-test were used to compare the cortical thickness between groups.
Results: We identified 5 individuals (4 female patients, 7 years 10 months-19 years) with a particularly small brain among a series of 50, all suffering from a severe neurodevelopmental disorder with no ability to communicate verbally and, in 3 of them, no ability to walk. Genetic analysis revealed in all individuals the presence of the same homozygous variant c.2953A>G (p.R985G) in the gene (ROTATIN). The same variant was found in 2 fetuses whose neuropathologic evaluation showed a major reduction in the thickness of the ventricular zone and neuronal heterotopias. The cortical plate was reduced by 70% compared with controls, irrespective of the region considered. Immunostaining with vimentin showed a 50% loss of radial glial columns, characteristic of radial microbrain.
Discussion: Our data show that the homozygous c.2953A>G substitution in is a recurrent variant responsible for radial microbrain, the most severe form of primary microcephaly. Our combined neurologic, imaging, and histopathologic approaches provide a better understanding of the severity of this condition and its prognosis.
Trial Registration Information: ClinicalTrials.gov number: NCT01565005.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11949245 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/NXG.0000000000200221 | DOI Listing |
Neurol Genet
April 2025
Service de Neurologie Pédiatrique, DMU INOV-RDB, APHP, Hôpital Robert Debré, Paris, France.
Background And Objectives: Genetic primary microcephaly (PM) is a defect in early brain development leading to congenital microcephaly, mostly recessively inherited, and mild-to-moderate intellectual disability. PM has been largely elucidated, thanks to exome and genome sequencing. However, radial microbrain, the most severe form of genetic PM or micrencephaly described in the 1980s, which leads to early lethality or very severe intellectual handicap, remains without a molecular diagnosis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur Radiol
March 2002
Department of Radiology, Istanbul Sisli Etfal Hospital, Istanbul, Turkey.
The aim of this study was the assessment of detection rate on MRI and description of MRI findings in patients with medically intractable epilepsy. Seventy-three patients with medically intractable epilepsy between the ages of 0 and 68 years old were evaluated by MRI, on three planes with spin-echo T1, fast spin-echo T2, and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery sequences, and, if necessary, with contrast-enhanced SE T1 sequences. Cerebral infarct regions with atrophy and gliosis in 8 patients, cerebral tumors in 5 patients, hippocampal sclerosis in 16 patients, radial microbrain in 1 patient, cortical dysplasia in 3 patients, pachygyria in 2 patients, subcortical heterotopia in 2 patients, schizencephaly in 3 patients, cerebral hemiatrophy in 2 patients, tuberous sclerosis in 1 patient, herpes encephalitis in 2 patients, Rasmussen's encephalitis in 1 patient, vascular malformations in 5 patients, and no abnormality in 22 patients were detected.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Neuroimaging
October 1999
Department of Pediatrics, Eastern Virginia Medical School, Norfolk, USA.
A premature infant exposed to carbamazepine in utero had a markedly undersized brain on cranial ultrasonogram. Postmortem examination of the brain revealed no evidence of hypoxic-ischemic injury, hemorrhage, infarction, congenital infection, or calcification. The normal cortical gyral pattern, normal residual germinal matrix, and normal cortical lamination suggested the diagnosis of a radial microbrain form of micrencephaly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF