Literature DB >> 20929962

GPR56-related bilateral frontoparietal polymicrogyria: further evidence for an overlap with the cobblestone complex.

Nadia Bahi-Buisson1, Karine Poirier, Nathalie Boddaert, Catherine Fallet-Bianco, Nicola Specchio, Enrico Bertini, Okay Caglayan, Karine Lascelles, Caroline Elie, Jérôme Rambaud, Michel Baulac, Isabelle An, Patricia Dias, Vincent des Portes, Marie Laure Moutard, Christine Soufflet, Monique El Maleh, Cherif Beldjord, Laurent Villard, Jamel Chelly.   

Abstract

GPR56 mutations cause an autosomal recessive polymicrogyria syndrome that has distinctive radiological features combining bilateral frontoparietal polymicrogyria, white matter abnormalities and cerebellar hypoplasia. Recent investigations of a GPR56 knockout mouse model suggest that bilateral bifrontoparietal polymicrogyria shares some features of the cobblestone brain malformation and demonstrate that loss of GPR56 leads to a dysregulation of the maintenance of the pial basement membrane integrity in the forebrain and the rostral cerebellum. In light of these findings and other data in the literature, this study aimed to refine the clinical features with the first description of a foetopathological case and to define the range of cobblestone-like features in GPR56 bilateral bifrontoparietal polymicrogyria in a sample of 14 patients. We identified homozygous GPR56 mutations in 14 patients from eight consanguineous families with typical bilateral bifrontoparietal polymicrogyria and in one foetal case, out of 30 patients with bifrontoparietal polymicrogyria referred for molecular screening. The foetal case, which was terminated at 35 weeks of gestation in view of suspicion of Walker Warburg syndrome, showed a cobblestone-like lissencephaly with a succession of normal, polymicrogyric and 'cobblestone-like' cortex with ectopic neuronal overmigration, agenesis of the cerebellar vermis and hypoplastic cerebellar hemispheres with additional neuronal overmigration in the pons and the cerebellar cortex. The 14 patients with GPR56 mutations (median 8.25 years, range 1.5-33 years) were phenotypically homogeneous with a distinctive clinical course characterized by pseudomyopathic behaviour at onset that subsequently evolved into severe mental and motor retardation. Generalized seizures (12/14) occurred later with onset ranging from 2.5 to 10 years with consistent electroencephalogram findings of predominantly anterior bursts of low amplitude α-like activity. Neuroimaging demonstrated a common phenotype with bilateral frontoparietally predominant polymicrogyria (13/13), cerebellar dysplasia with cysts mainly affecting the superior vermis (11/13) and patchy to diffuse myelination abnormalities (13/13). Additionally, the white matter abnormalities showed a peculiar evolution from severe hypomyelination at 4 months to patchy lesions later in childhood. Taken as a whole, these observations collectively demonstrate that GPR56 bilateral bifrontoparietal polymicrogyria combines all the features of a cobblestone-like lissencephaly and also suggest that GRP56-related defects produce a phenotypic continuum ranging from bilateral bifrontoparietal polymicrogyria to cobblestone-like lissencephaly.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2010        PMID: 20929962     DOI: 10.1093/brain/awq259

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain        ISSN: 0006-8950            Impact factor:   13.501


  56 in total

1.  Whole-exome sequencing identifies compound heterozygous mutations in WDR62 in siblings with recurrent polymicrogyria.

Authors:  David R Murdock; Gary D Clark; Matthew N Bainbridge; Irene Newsham; Yuan-Qing Wu; Donna M Muzny; Sau Wai Cheung; Richard A Gibbs; Melissa B Ramocki
Journal:  Am J Med Genet A       Date:  2011-08-10       Impact factor: 2.802

2.  Cerebellar Bottom-of-Fissure Dysplasia-a Novel Cerebellar Gray Matter Neuroimaging Pattern.

Authors:  Andrea Poretti; Andrea Capone; Anette Hackenberg; Ingeborg Kraegeloh-Mann; Gerhard Kurlemann; Guido Laube; Joachim Pietz; Mareike Schimmel; Wolfram Schwindt; Ianina Scheer; Eugen Boltshauser
Journal:  Cerebellum       Date:  2016-12       Impact factor: 3.847

3.  Tubulinopathies and Their Brain Malformation Syndromes: Every TUB on Its Own Bottom.

Authors:  Bernard S Chang
Journal:  Epilepsy Curr       Date:  2015 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 7.500

4.  Three Mutations in the Bilateral Frontoparietal Polymicrogyria Gene GPR56 in Pakistani Intellectual Disability Families.

Authors:  Humaira Aziz Sawal; Ricardo Harripaul; Anna Mikhailov; Kayla Vleuten; Farooq Naeem; Tanveer Nasr; Muhammad Jawad Hassan; John B Vincent; Muhammad Ayub; Muhammad Arshad Rafiq
Journal:  J Pediatr Genet       Date:  2017-12-21

5.  Polymicrogyria includes fusion of the molecular layer and decreased neuronal populations but normal cortical laminar organization.

Authors:  Alexander R Judkins; Daniel Martinez; Pamela Ferreira; William B Dobyns; Jeffrey A Golden
Journal:  J Neuropathol Exp Neurol       Date:  2011-06       Impact factor: 3.685

Review 6.  Malformations of cortical development and epilepsy.

Authors:  A James Barkovich; William B Dobyns; Renzo Guerrini
Journal:  Cold Spring Harb Perspect Med       Date:  2015-05-01       Impact factor: 6.915

7.  Bilateral frontoparietal polymicrogyria.

Authors:  Puneet Jain; Suvasini Sharma; Nadia Bahi-Buisson; Chérif Beldjord; Satinder Aneja
Journal:  Indian J Pediatr       Date:  2014-11-23       Impact factor: 1.967

8.  Disease-associated extracellular loop mutations in the adhesion G protein-coupled receptor G1 (ADGRG1; GPR56) differentially regulate downstream signaling.

Authors:  Ayush Kishore; Randy A Hall
Journal:  J Biol Chem       Date:  2017-04-19       Impact factor: 5.157

9.  A novel GPR56 mutation causes bilateral frontoparietal polymicrogyria.

Authors:  Rong Luo; Hye Min Yang; Zhaohui Jin; Dicky J J Halley; Bernard S Chang; Lesley MacPherson; Louise Brueton; Xianhua Piao
Journal:  Pediatr Neurol       Date:  2011-07       Impact factor: 3.372

10.  Malformations of Cerebral Cortex Development: Molecules and Mechanisms.

Authors:  Gordana Juric-Sekhar; Robert F Hevner
Journal:  Annu Rev Pathol       Date:  2019-01-24       Impact factor: 23.472

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.