| Literature DB >> 29243349 |
Pascaline Létard1,2,3, Séverine Drunat1,4, Yoann Vial1,4, Sarah Duerinckx5, Anais Ernault4, Daniel Amram6, Stéphanie Arpin7, Marta Bertoli8, Tiffany Busa9, Berten Ceulemans10, Julie Desir5, Martine Doco-Fenzy11, Siham Chafai Elalaoui12,13, Koenraad Devriendt14, Laurence Faivre15, Christine Francannet16, David Geneviève17, Marion Gérard18, Cyril Gitiaux19, Sophie Julia20, Sébastien Lebon21, Toni Lubala22, Michèle Mathieu-Dramard23, Hélène Maurey24, Julia Metreau24, Sanaa Nasserereddine25, Mathilde Nizon26, Geneviève Pierquin27, Nathalie Pouvreau1,4, Clothilde Rivier-Ringenbach28, Massimiliano Rossi29,30, Elise Schaefer31, Abdelaziz Sefiani12,13, Sabine Sigaudy9, Yves Sznajer32, Yusuf Tunca33, Sophie Guilmin Crepon34,35, Corinne Alberti34,35, Monique Elmaleh-Bergès36, Brigitte Benzacken1,3,37, Bernd Wollnick38, C Geoffrey Woods39, Anita Rauch40, Marc Abramowicz5, Vincent El Ghouzzi1, Pierre Gressens1,41,42, Alain Verloes1,4, Sandrine Passemard1,4,42.
Abstract
Autosomal recessive microcephaly or microcephaly primary hereditary (MCPH) is a genetically heterogeneous neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by a reduction in brain volume, indirectly measured by an occipitofrontal circumference (OFC) 2 standard deviations or more below the age- and sex-matched mean (-2SD) at birth and -3SD after 6 months, and leading to intellectual disability of variable severity. The abnormal spindle-like microcephaly gene (ASPM), the human ortholog of the Drosophila melanogaster "abnormal spindle" gene (asp), encodes ASPM, a protein localized at the centrosome of apical neuroprogenitor cells and involved in spindle pole positioning during neurogenesis. Loss-of-function mutations in ASPM cause MCPH5, which affects the majority of all MCPH patients worldwide. Here, we report 47 unpublished patients from 39 families carrying 28 new ASPM mutations, and conduct an exhaustive review of the molecular, clinical, neuroradiological, and neuropsychological features of the 282 families previously reported (with 161 distinct ASPM mutations). Furthermore, we show that ASPM-related microcephaly is not systematically associated with intellectual deficiency and discuss the association between the structural brain defects (strong reduction in cortical volume and surface area) that modify the cortical map of these patients and their cognitive abilities.Entities:
Keywords: ASPM; MCPH; brain development; brain imaging; centrosome; intellectual disability; primary microcephaly
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29243349 DOI: 10.1002/humu.23381
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.878