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Identification of Mutations in TMEM5 and ISPD as a Cause of Severe Cobblestone Lissencephaly
Authors:Sandrine Vuillaumier-Barrot  Céline Bouchet-Séraphin  Malika Chelbi  Louise Devisme  Samuel Quentin  Steven Gazal  Annie Laquerrière  Catherine Fallet-Bianco  Philippe Loget  Sylvie Odent  Dominique Carles  Anne Bazin  Jacqueline Aziza  Alix Clemenson  Fabien Guimiot  Maryse Bonnière  Sophie Monnot  Christine Bole-Feysot  Jean-Pierre Bernard  Laurence Loeuillet  Marie Gonzales  Koryna Socha  Bernard Grandchamp  Tania Attié-Bitach  Férechté Encha-Razavi  Nathalie Seta
Abstract:Cobblestone lissencephaly is a peculiar brain malformation with characteristic radiological anomalies. It is defined as cortical dysplasia that results when neuroglial overmigration into the arachnoid space forms an extracortical layer that produces agyria and/or a “cobblestone” brain surface and ventricular enlargement. Cobblestone lissencephaly is pathognomonic of a continuum of autosomal-recessive diseases characterized by cerebral, ocular, and muscular deficits. These include Walker-Warburg syndrome, muscle-eye-brain disease, and Fukuyama muscular dystrophy. Mutations in POMT1, POMT2, POMGNT1, LARGE, FKTN, and FKRP identified these diseases as alpha-dystroglycanopathies. Our exhaustive screening of these six genes, in a cohort of 90 fetal cases, led to the identification of a mutation in only 53% of the families, suggesting that other genes might also be involved. We therefore decided to perform a genome-wide study in two multiplex families. This allowed us to identify two additional genes: TMEM5 and ISPD. Because TMEM has a glycosyltransferase domain and ISPD has an isoprenoid synthase domain characteristic of nucleotide diP-sugar transferases, these two proteins are thought to be involved in the glycosylation of dystroglycan. Further screening of 40 families with cobblestone lissencephaly identified nonsense and frameshift mutations in another four unrelated cases for each gene, increasing the mutational rate to 64% in our cohort. All these cases displayed a severe phenotype of cobblestone lissencephaly A. TMEM5 mutations were frequently associated with gonadal dysgenesis and neural tube defects, and ISPD mutations were frequently associated with brain vascular anomalies.
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