Abstract
Doublecortin (DCX) and tubulin play critical roles in neuronal migration. DCX mutations usually cause anterior dominant lissencephaly in males and subcortical
band heterotopia (SBH) in females. We used whole-exome sequencing to investigate causative
gene variants in a large family with late-childhood-onset focal epilepsy and anterior
dominant pachygyria without SBH in both genders. Two potential variants were found
for the genes encoding DCX and beta tubulin isotype 1 (TUBB1). The novel DCX mutation (p.D90G, NP_000546.2) appeared to be a major causative variant, whereas
the novel mutation of TUBB1 (p.R62fsX, NP_110400.1) was found only in patients with more-severe intellectual
disability after gender matching. We report an unusual DCX-related disorder exhibiting familial pachygyria without SBH in both genders.
Keywords
To read this article in full you will need to make a payment
Purchase one-time access:
Academic & Personal: 24 hour online accessCorporate R&D Professionals: 24 hour online accessOne-time access price info
- For academic or personal research use, select 'Academic and Personal'
- For corporate R&D use, select 'Corporate R&D Professionals'
Subscribe:
Subscribe to Brain and DevelopmentAlready a print subscriber? Claim online access
Already an online subscriber? Sign in
Register: Create an account
Institutional Access: Sign in to ScienceDirect
References
- Somatic mosaicism and variable penetrance in doublecortin-associated migration disorders.Neurology. 2003; 60: 329-332
- Lissencephaly and other malformations of cortical development: 1995 update.Neuropediatrics. 1995; 26: 132-147
- The location of DCX mutations predicts malformation severity in X-linked lissencephaly.Neurogenetics. 2008; 9: 277-285
- Nonsyndromic mental retardation and cryptogenic epilepsy in women with doublecortin gene mutations.Ann Neurol. 2003; 54: 30-37
- Familial Lennox–Gastaut syndrome in male siblings with a novel DCX mutation and anterior pachygyria.Epilepsia. 2010; 51: 1902-1905
- Neuronal migration disorders.Neurobiol Dis. 2010; 38: 154-166
- LIS1 and XLIS (DCX) mutations cause most classical lissencephaly, but different patterns of malformation.Hum Mol Genet. 1998; 7: 2029-2037
- Phenotypic spectrum of the tubulin-related disorders and functional implications of disease-causing mutations.Curr Opin Genet Dev. 2011; 21: 286-294
- Mutation of the beta1-tubulin gene associated with congenital macrothrombocytopenia affecting microtubule assembly.Blood. 2009; 113: 458-461
- Spatio-temporal transcriptome of the human brain.Nature. 2011; 478: 483-489
Article info
Publication history
Published online: December 29, 2015
Accepted:
December 11,
2015
Received in revised form:
December 6,
2015
Received:
November 1,
2015
Identification
Copyright
© 2015 The Japanese Society of Child Neurology. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.