| Literature DB >> 21668957 |
Saqib Mahmood1, Wasim Ahmad, Muhammad J Hassan.
Abstract
Autosomal Recessive Primary Microcephaly (MCPH) is a rare disorder of neurogenic mitosis characterized by reduced head circumference at birth with variable degree of mental retardation. In MCPH patients, brain size reduced to almost one-third of its original volume due to reduced number of generated cerebral cortical neurons during embryonic neurogensis. So far, seven genetic loci (MCPH1-7) for this condition have been mapped with seven corresponding genes (MCPH1, WDR62, CDK5RAP2, CEP152, ASPM, CENPJ, and STIL) identified from different world populations. Contribution of ASPM and WDR62 gene mutations in MCPH World wide is more than 50%. By and large, primary microcephaly patients are phenotypically indistinguishable, however, recent studies in patients with mutations in MCPH1, WDR62 and ASPM genes showed a broader clinical and/or cellular phenotype. It has been proposed that mutations in MCPH genes can cause the disease phenotype by disturbing: 1) orientation of mitotic spindles, 2) chromosome condensation mechanism during embryonic neurogenesis, 3) DNA damage-response signaling, 4) transcriptional regulations and microtubule dynamics, 5) certain unknown centrosomal mechanisms that control the number of neurons generated by neural precursor cells. Recent discoveries of mammalian models for MCPH have open up horizons for researchers to add more knowledge regarding the etiology and pathophysiology of MCPH. High incidence of MCPH in Pakistani population reflects the most probable involvement of consanguinity. Genetic counseling and clinical management through carrier detection/prenatal diagnosis in MCPH families can help reducing the incidence of this autosomal recessive disorder.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21668957 PMCID: PMC3123551 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-6-39
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
A depiction of clinical symptoms associated with MCPH
| MCPH features associated with Apparent phenotype | MCPH features associated with MRI-based/cellular phenotype |
|---|---|
| Microcephaly (at least 2 SD below the mean) at birth, mild to severe, non-progressive mental retardation (borderline IQ is possible). | Reduction of cerebral cortical volume (neuronal proliferation defect) and simplification of gyral pattern in most cases |
| Epilepsy/fits/seizures are very rare but cannot exclude the diagnosis | Premature chromosome condensation in some cases with increased prophase-like cells |
| Sloping forehead is although common but is not always associated | Pachygyria with cortical thickening as well as hypoplasia/agenesis of the corpus callosum (neuronal migration defect) in some cases |
| Delay in early motor milestones (Speech delay is common) | In few cases Lissencephaly, schizencephaly, polymicrogyria and, cerebellar hypoplasia have also been observed |
| Some times aggressive but otherwise have a happy effect (easy to handle) | |
| Short stature in some cases |
A brief description of known MCPH loci/genes so far
| Locus | Chromosome | Gene | Cellular location | Proposed Function | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MCPH1 | 8p23 | Nucleus/Chromatin | DNA Damage repair, chromosome condensation | [ | |
| MCPH2 | 19q13.12- q13.2 | Nucleus, cetrosomal during mitosis | Not yet established, expression pattern resembles with | [ | |
| MCPH3 | 9q33.2 | Centrosome/Midbody | Regulation of microtubule function/Centrosome maturation | [ | |
| MCPH4 | 15q15-q21 | Centrosome | Involved in centriol duplication | [ | |
| MCPH5 | 1q31.3 | Pericentrosomal/Midbody | Orientaion of mitotic spindles during embryonic neurogenesis | [ | |
| MCPH6 | 13q12.12 | Centrosome/Midbody | Centriole length control/microtubule function | [ | |
| MCPH7 | 1p33 | Pericentrosomal | Spindle organization/Cell cycle progression | [ |
Tabular representation of MCPH animal models
| Human Gene for MCPH | Animal Ortholog/s of Human Gene | Animal Model Phenotype | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reduced protein recruitment to centrosomes and formation of abnormal spindles, missegregation of DNA, aberrant cytokinesis, changes in cell-cycle progression and defects in DNA damage repair. Adult brain sizes are reported to be normal in drosophila and infertility has been shown in mice | [ | ||
| Centrosome dysfunction loss of connection between Centrosomes and pericentriolar matrix) Only subtle defects of asymmetric divisions and Brains are reportedly of normal size | [ | ||
| (drosophila) incorrect centrosome as microtubule-organizing center, mitotic spindle positioning defect, cell cleavage plane positioning defect during asymmetric cell division and spermatogenesis defect (mice) defects in meiosis I and II, affecting the coordination of chromosome segregation and spindle positioning, transgene rescues the microcephaly phenotype but does not produce a gain of function. reduce fertility in males and females mice but do not alter copulation frequency. | [ | ||
| (drosophila) loss of centrioles, abnormal spindle formation and DNA segregation defects. Mutant flies develop into morphologically normal adults without cilia or flagella and die shortly after birth ( | [ | ||
| (mice) knockout of SIL is embryonic lethal at E10.5. Between E7.5 and E8.5. the knockout embryos are smaller, display pericardial swelling, midline neural tube defects, failure of neural tube closure and holoprosencephaly. Failure in left-right specification. Due to block in Sonic Hedgehog (Shh) signalling, and increased apoptosis | [ | ||
| (Zebra fish) embryonic lethal with increased number of mitotic cells with defects including mono-polar spindles, loss of polarity, misaligned chromosomes, and broadened spindle poles. |
An account of Pakistani families linked to different MCPH loci and a comparison with other populations
| Locus/Gene | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 (1.39%) | 2 | 8 Iranian families, 1 Caucasian family | |
| 2 (1.39%) | 1 | 3 Iranian families, 11 Turkish families, 1 Mexican family, 1 Arab family, | |
| 3 (2.09%) | 2 | No family reported outside Pakistan | |
| 2 (1.39%) | 0 | 3 Canadian families and 1 Arab Family | |
| 83 (58.04%) | 79 | 13 Iranian Families, 12 Arab families, 8 Indian families, about 22 European families, 5 african families, and many sporadic patients | |
| 3 (2.09%) | 3 | 5 Iranian Families, 1 Brazilian Family | |
| 0 (0%) | 0 | 3 Indian Families, 2 Iranian Families | |
| 48 Pakistani families (33.56%), | |||
| About 120 families from different World Populations have reported to be unlinked to known MCPH loci including 81 from Iran | |||
| 143 Pakistani families and about 200 families with MCPH World wide have been screened so far | |||
*- Number of families has been calculated from published data. Research groups working on genetics of MCPH may have more families in their labs.
ASPM gene mutations in MCPH families from Pakistan
| Mutation | Language Group | State of Mutation | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 349C-T | Northern Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 719delCT | Northern Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 1258delTCTCAAT | Northern Pakistani | homozygous | Two | [ |
| 9190C-T | Northern Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 2936+5G-T (intronic) | Northern Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 1990C-T | Northern Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 8508delGA | Sindi, Northern Pakistani | homozygous | Four | [ |
| 3082G-A | Northern Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 4581delA | Northern Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 4795C-T | Northern Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 7895C-T | Northern Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 9159delA | Northern Pakistani | homozygous | Three | [ |
| 9557C-G | Hindko | homozygous | Three | [ |
| 9984+1G-T (intronic) | Northern Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 3663delG | Northern Pakistani | homozygous | Two | [ |
| 1002delA | Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 2938C-T | Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 3055C-T | Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 7894C-T | Pakistani/heterozygous | Homozygous | Two | [ |
| 3477delCGCTA | Pakistani | Homozygous | One | [ |
| 6732delA | Pakistani | Homozygous | One | [ |
| 8668C-T | Pakistani | Homozygous | One | [ |
| 3978G-A | Pashto.... | Heterozygous/homozygous | Eighteen | [ |
| 9319C-T | Pakistani | heterozygous | One | [ |
| 9492T-G | Pakistani | homozygous | Three | [ |
| 9595A-T | Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 9677insG | Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 9697C-T | Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 1260delTCAAGTC | Saraiki | homozygous | Two | [ |
| 3188T-G | Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 4855delTA | Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 5136C-A | Sindhi | homozygous | One | [ |
| 5149delA | Saraiki | homozygous | One | [ |
| 6335delAT | Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 7761T-G | Pakistani | homozygous | Two | [ |
| 7782delGA | Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 8378delT | Pakistani | homozygous | More than one | [ |
| 9118insCATT | Punjabi | homozygous | One | [ |
| 9238A-T | Punjabi | homozygous | Two | [ |
| 9681delA | Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 9730C-T | Kashmiri | homozygous | One | [ |
| 9745delCT | Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 9789T-A | Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 10059C-A | Saraiki | homozygous | One | [ |
| 9539A-C | Sindi | homozygous | One | [ |
| 2101C-T | Pakistani | homozygous | One | [ |
| 6686delGAAA | Pakistani | homozygous | Two | [ |
| 77delG | Pakistani | homozygous | Two | [ |
MCPH1, WDR62, CDK5RAP2, and CENPJ mutations in MCPH families from Pakistan
| Gene Symbol | Mutation | Language | State of | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 74C-G | Northern Pakistani | Homozygous | Two | [ | |
| 3232G-A | Sindhi | Homozygous | One | [ | |
| 246T-A | Kashmiri | Homozygous | Two | [ | |
| IVS26-15A-G | Northern Pakistani | Homozygous | One | [ | |
| 17delC | Northern Pakistani | Homozygous | Two | [ | |
| 3243delTCAG | Pushto | Homozygous | One | [ |