| Literature DB >> 28286691 |
Siti W Mohd-Zin1, Ahmed I Marwan2, Mohamad K Abou Chaar3, Azlina Ahmad-Annuar4, Noraishah M Abdul-Aziz1.
Abstract
Spina bifida is among the phenotypes of the larger condition known as neural tube defects (NTDs). It is the most common central nervous system malformation compatible with life and the second leading cause of birth defects after congenital heart defects. In this review paper, we define spina bifida and discuss the phenotypes seen in humans as described by both surgeons and embryologists in order to compare and ultimately contrast it to the leading animal model, the mouse. Our understanding of spina bifida is currently limited to the observations we make in mouse models, which reflect complete or targeted knockouts of genes, which perturb the whole gene(s) without taking into account the issue of haploinsufficiency, which is most prominent in the human spina bifida condition. We thus conclude that the need to study spina bifida in all its forms, both aperta and occulta, is more indicative of the spina bifida in surviving humans and that the measure of deterioration arising from caudal neural tube defects, more commonly known as spina bifida, must be determined by the level of the lesion both in mouse and in man.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28286691 PMCID: PMC5327787 DOI: 10.1155/2017/5364827
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scientifica (Cairo) ISSN: 2090-908X
Figure 1Schematic representation of the open (aperta) and close (occulta) types of spina bifida. (a) Myeloschisis which represents the most severe form of open spina bifida. (b) Myelomeningocele which represents another typical severe form of open spina bifida (spina bifida aperta/spina bifida cystica). The typical representation is that of the spinal cord lying outside the spinal canal. (c) Meningocele that represents open or close spina bifida (the skin may or may not be present) but spinal cord does not lie outside the spinal canal. (d) Lipomyelomeningocele that represents closed spina bifida (spina bifida occulta) (covered with skin) but spinal cord is intermeshed with lipid globules (in yellow). (e) Lipomeningocele that exhibits closed spina bifida but spinal cord does not lie outside spinal canal even though lipid globules are present. (f) Spinal dorsal dermal sinus tract; spina bifida occulta with vertebral arches missing (often asymptomatic and is thought to be a mesodermal defect and a defect of secondary neurulation).
Comprehensive list of syndromic spina bifida.
| Mode of inheritance | Condition | References |
|---|---|---|
| Autosomal recessive | (1) Jarcho-Levin syndrome (spondylocostal dysostosis): shortened trunk, opisthotonus position of the head, short neck, barrel-shaped thorax, multiple wedge shaped and block vertebrae, spina bifida, and rib anomalies. | [ |
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| Autosomal dominant | (1) DiGeorge syndrome: hypocalcemia, parathyroid hypoplasia, thymic hypoplasia, conotruncal cardiac defects, and facial features. A case of associated spina bifida was reported. | [ |
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| X-Linked | (1) Focal dermal hypoplasia (male lethality, atrophy and linear pigmentation of the skin, papillomas of skin and mucosae, ocular defects, hypoplastic teeth, and digital anomalies apart from spina bifida). | [ |
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| Sporadic | (1) Isolated hemihyperplasia: asymmetric overgrowth of one or more regions with one reported case of lumbar myelomeningocele. | [ |
Comprehensive list of human spina bifida genes.
| Genes (40 genes) | Population and sample size (in brackets) of spina bifida cases | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Studies showed association with genes related NTDs or risk factor for spina bifida | Studies showed no association with genes related NTDs | ||
| One carbon metabolism (including homocysteine remethylation) (8 genes) | |||
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| Dutch (180 patients) | [ | |
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| Mixed USA (259 cases) | Mixed USA (252 cases), Dutch (180 patients) | [ |
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| Mixed USA (103 cases) | [ | |
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| Mixed USA (259 cases), mixed UK (229 patients), Dutch (109 cases) | Irish (575 mixed families), Dutch (109 cases; 180 patients) | [ |
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| Mixed USA (301 families), Dutch (109 cases) | Mixed USA (259 cases), Dutch (180 patients) | [ |
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| Mixed USA (103 cases) | [ | |
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| Dutch (180 patients) | [ | |
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| Dutch (180 cases) | [ | |
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| NTDs in mouse mutant (7 genes) | |||
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| Mixed USA (268 patients and parents) | [ | |
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| Mixed USA (246 cases) | [ | |
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| USA (74 cases) | [ | |
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| Dutch (88 cases and 56 mothers) | Mixed USA (407 triads) | [ |
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| Mixed USA (48 cases) | [ | |
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| Dutch (117 mixed patients) | [ | |
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| Dutch (117 mixed patients) | [ | |
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| Folate metabolism (5 genes) | |||
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| Mixed USA (259 cases) | Dutch (180 patients) | [ |
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| Irish (283 cases), mixed USA (61 cases, multiaffected families) | Mixed USA (259 cases), mixed UK (229 patients), Dutch (180 patients; 109 patients) | [ |
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| Irish (509 mixed cases), mixed USA (259 mixed cases), Italian (142 cases), Irish (176 mixed cases) | Mixed UK (229 patients), Dutch (103 cases), Dutch (180 patients) | [ |
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| Irish (451 cases), mixed USA (259 cases), mixed UK (229 patients), Italian (15 cases) | Dutch (180 patients), Mexican (Yucatan) (97 cases), Italian (15 cases) | [ |
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| Non-Hispanic white USA (264 cases), mixed USA (259 cases) | Dutch (180 patients) | [ |
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| Glucose metabolism (4 genes) | |||
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| Mixed USA (507 cases) | [ | |
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| Mixed USA (507 cases) | [ | |
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| Mixed USA (507 cases) | [ | |
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| Mixed USA (507 cases) | [ | |
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| DNA repair and DNA methylation (3 genes) | |||
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| Mixed USA (380 patients) | [ | |
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| Mixed USA (380 patients) | [ | |
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| Belgium (83 patients) | (Rochtus et al., 2016) | |
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| Folate transport (2 genes) | |||
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| Dutch (179 patients) | [ | |
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| Dutch (180 patients) | Mixed USA (259 cases), mixed UK (229 patients) | [ |
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| PCP genes (4 gene) | |||
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| Italian and mixed USA (658 patients), Italian and French (102 patients) | Mixed UK and USA (24 patients) | [ |
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| California (192 patients) | [ | |
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| California (192 patients) | [ | |
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| Han Chinese cohort (20 cases) | [ | |
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| Retinol metabolism (1 gene) | |||
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| Mixed USA (318 families) | [ | |
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| Axial development in mouse (1 gene) | |||
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| Mixed USA (316 cases) | [ | |
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| Methylation reactions (1 gene) | |||
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| Mixed USA (152 cases) | Dutch (180 patients) | [ |
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| Oxidative stress (2 genes) | |||
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| Mixed USA (610 trios or duos) | [ | |
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| Mixed USA (610 trios or duos) | [ | |
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| Intermediate filament protein (1 gene) | |||
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| Mixed UK, USA, and Swedish (233 patients) | [ | |
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| Cell adhesion molecules (1 gene) | |||
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| USA (204 patients) | [ | |
A total of 40 genes reported showing association/risk factor for spina bifida as reviewed in Greene et al. [93].
List of mouse models that exhibits spina bifida (reviewed in [4, 54]).
| Mouse models | |
|---|---|
| Gene or mutants (53 genes) | |
| (1) | |
| (2) | |
| (3) | |
| (4) | |
| (5) | |
| (6) | |
| (7) | |
| (8) | |
| (9) | |
| (10) | |
| (11) F | |
| (12) | |
| (13) | |
| (14) | |
| (15) | |
| (16) | |
| (17) | |
| (18) | |
| (19) | |
| (20) | |
| (21) | |
| (22) | |
| (23) | |
| (24) | |
| (25) | |
| (26) | |
| (27) | |
| (28) p | |
| (29) | |
| (30) | |
| (31) | |
| (32) | |
| (33) | |
| (34) | |
| (35) | |
| (36) | |
| (37) | |
| (38) | |
| (39) | |
| (40) | |
| (41) | |
| (42) | |
| (43) | |
| (44) | |
| (45) | |
| (46) | |
| (47) | |
| (48) | |
| (49) | |
| (50) | |
| (51) | |
| (52) | |
| (53) | |
| Mouse strain (1 gene) | |
| (54) | |
| PCP genes (4 genes) | |
| (55) | |
| (56) | |
| (57) | |
| (58) | |
| Lethal before gestation day 12 (3 genes) | |
| (59) | |
| (60) | |
| (61) 22C | |
| Spina bifida occulta (13 genes) | |
| (62) | |
| (63) | |
| (64) | |
| (65) | |
| (66) | |
| (67) | |
| (68) | |
| (69) | |
| (70) | |
| (71) | |
| (72) | |
| (73) | |
| (74) | |
| Mouse models studied in nutrient supplement rescue (5 genes) | |
| (1) | |
| (2) | |
| (3) | |
| (4) | |
| (5) |
Figure 2Points of closure in the mouse embryo and phenotypes of failure of closure of the various points along the neuraxis. (a) Schematic figure illustrating the multiple points of closure of the neural tube, directions of closure, and the different locations of neuropores in the developing embryo. (1), site of closure (1) which occurs at the level of somite 3 in the 6-7-somite embryo. Closure (1) is the initiation event of neurulation. Closure then progresses caudally and is completed by closure of the posterior neuropore (PNP) at the 29-30-somite stage of development; (2), second closure site at around the 10-somite stage; (3), closure (3) site which begins soon after closure (2). Arrows depict spreading of neural tube closure to neighbouring regions with completion of anterior neuropore closure soon after initiation of closure (3) and closure of the hindbrain neuropore at the 18–20-somite stage. (b) Phenotype resulting from failure of closure (1): craniorachischisis; (c) phenotype resulting from failure of closure (2): exencephaly; (d) phenotype of failure of the caudal wave of spinal closure, leading to an enlarged PNP and later development of spina bifida. (A), posterior neuropore; (B), branchial arches; (C), developing heart; (D), hindbrain; (E), midbrain; (F), forebrain; ANP: anterior neuropore; HNP: hindbrain neuropore.
| Neural tube structure | Genes expressed at |
|---|---|
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| Neuroepithelium |
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| Floor plate and notochord |
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| Notochord |
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| Surface ectoderm |
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| Dorsolateral hinge points |
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| Tips of neural folds at E9.5 |
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| Dorsal roof of closed neural tube bridge |
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| Tips of neural folds (surface ectoderm) |
Figure 3Schematic representation of the formation of the mouse spinal neural tube. Process of closure of the PNP of embryos undergoing Mode 1 (a, b, d) or Mode 2 (a, c, d) neurulation. (a) Neuroepithelium thickens and converges; (b) formation of bilateral neural folds which are elevated (Mode 1); (c) apposing tips of neural folds aided by bending at the dorsolateral hinge points (DLHP) of the bilateral neural folds (Mode 2); (d) adhesion and fusion at the tips of the neural folds; (e) remodeling of the neural tube. Ne, neuroepithelium; Se, surface ectoderm; Me, mesoderm; MHP, median hinge point; DLHP, dorsolateral hinge points; POAF, point of adhesion and fusion; Nt, notochord.
Figure 4Schematic figure showing progressive developmental stages of the mouse embryo and sections through the PNP at these stages. (a) Schematic of embryo at 6–10-somite stage, which has already undergone closure (1); (b) section through PNP of (a), depicting Mode 1 neurulation; (c) schematic of embryo at 12–15-somite stage; (d) section through PNP of (c) exhibiting Mode 2 neurulation; (e) schematic of embryo which has undergone closures (1), (2), and (3) with PNP being the only remaining unfused section of the neural tube; (f) section through PNP of (e) depicting Mode 3 neurulation.
| Mutant name | Gene mutated | Function of protein | Possible mechanism of NTD | Schematic | Rate of | Phenotype and reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 |
| Growth factor receptor | Unknown (NTDs occur only in chimaeras) |
| E10.5, 29.5% have spina bifida and 15% have ectopic neural tube | Spina bifida, second NT; NT in NT & kinky tail [ |
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| Tumour necrosis factor receptor associated factor 4 |
| Intracellular signaling adaptor | Unknown | No ectopic neural tube | 40% homozygous nulls have spina bifida | Spina bifida [ |
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| Shp2 |
| Tyrosine phosphatase | Unknown (NTDs occur only in chimaeras) |
| E10.5, 36% of high content chimeras have second neural tube and 59% have spina bifida | Spina bifida, second NT [ |
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| Axial defects | ND | ND | ND | No ectopic neural tube | 10% penetrance in CD1 | Spina bifida [ |
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| Glial cells missing-1 |
| Transcription factor | Ectopic expression causes NTDs by unknown mechanism |
| 25.8% transgenics have spina bifida; 100% transgenics have ectopic neural tube | Spina bifida; multiple NT [ |
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| Vacuolated lens | ND | ND | Suggested failure in apposition and fusion? |
| 50% of homozygous nulls show spina bifida at 12 dpc | Spina bifida [ |
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| PAK4 |
| Cytoskeletal organization | Target for Rho GTPase Cdc42 |
| None | Double neural tube with one notochord |
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| EphA2 |
| Adhesion and fusion? | Receptor tyrosine kinase |
| None | Kinky tail with double neural tube |
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| WASP |
| Cytoskeletal organization | Formation of cell-surface projections (filopodia) required for cell movement and actin-based motility |
| None | Wavy neural tube |
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| Vinculin |
| Cytoskeletal organization | Major constituent of cell junctions (cell matrix & cell-cell) |
| None | Wavy neural tube |