| Literature DB >> 33077954 |
Sheng Chih Jin1,2,3, Weilai Dong1,2, Adam J Kundishora4, Shreyas Panchagnula4, Andres Moreno-De-Luca5, Charuta G Furey4,6, August A Allocco4, Rebecca L Walker7, Carol Nelson-Williams2, Hannah Smith4, Ashley Dunbar4, Sierra Conine4, Qiongshi Lu8, Xue Zeng1,2, Michael C Sierant1,2, James R Knight2,9, William Sullivan4, Phan Q Duy4, Tyrone DeSpenza4, Benjamin C Reeves4, Jason K Karimy4, Arnaud Marlier4, Christopher Castaldi9, Irina R Tikhonova9, Boyang Li10, Helena Perez Peña11, James R Broach12, Edith M Kabachelor13, Peter Ssenyonga13, Christine Hehnly14, Li Ge8, Boris Keren15, Andrew T Timberlake16, June Goto17, Francesco T Mangano17, James M Johnston18, William E Butler19, Benjamin C Warf20, Edward R Smith20, Steven J Schiff14, David D Limbrick21, Gregory Heuer22,23, Eric M Jackson24, Bermans J Iskandar25, Shrikant Mane2,9, Shozeb Haider11, Bulent Guclu26, Yasar Bayri27, Yener Sahin27, Charles C Duncan4, Michael L J Apuzzo4, Michael L DiLuna4, Ellen J Hoffman28, Nenad Sestan29, Laura R Ment30,31, Seth L Alper32, Kaya Bilguvar2,9, Daniel H Geschwind33, Murat Günel2,4, Richard P Lifton1,2, Kristopher T Kahle34,35,36.
Abstract
Congenital hydrocephalus (CH), characterized by enlarged brain ventricles, is considered a disease of excessive cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) accumulation and thereby treated with neurosurgical CSF diversion with high morbidity and failure rates. The poor neurodevelopmental outcomes and persistence of ventriculomegaly in some post-surgical patients highlight our limited knowledge of disease mechanisms. Through whole-exome sequencing of 381 patients (232 trios) with sporadic, neurosurgically treated CH, we found that damaging de novo mutations account for >17% of cases, with five different genes exhibiting a significant de novo mutation burden. In all, rare, damaging mutations with large effect contributed to ~22% of sporadic CH cases. Multiple CH genes are key regulators of neural stem cell biology and converge in human transcriptional networks and cell types pertinent for fetal neuro-gliogenesis. These data implicate genetic disruption of early brain development, not impaired CSF dynamics, as the primary pathomechanism of a significant number of patients with sporadic CH.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33077954 PMCID: PMC7871900 DOI: 10.1038/s41591-020-1090-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440