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Comprehensive genomic analysis of patients with disorders of cerebral cortical development.

Wojciech WiszniewskiPawel GawlinskiTomasz GambinMonika Bekiesinska-FigatowskaEwa ObersztynDorota Antczak-MarachZeynep Hande Coban AkdemirTamar HarelEnder KaracaMarta JurekKatarzyna KowalczykBeata NowakowskaMalgorzata KrukIwona TerczynskaAlicja Goszczanska-CiuchtaMariola Rudzka-DybalaEwa JamrozAntoni PyrkoszAnna Jakubiuk-TomaszukPiotr IwanowskiDorota Gieruszczak-BialekMalgorzata PiotrowiczMaria SasiadekIwona KochanowskaBarbara GurdaBarbara SteinbornMateusz DawidziukJennifer CastanedaPawel WlasienkoNatalia BezniakowShalini N JhangianiDorota Hoffman-ZacharskaJerzy BalElzbieta SzczepanikEric BoerwinkleRichard A GibbsJames R Lupski
Published in: European journal of human genetics : EJHG (2018)
Malformations of cortical development (MCDs) manifest with structural brain anomalies that lead to neurologic sequelae, including epilepsy, cerebral palsy, developmental delay, and intellectual disability. To investigate the underlying genetic architecture of patients with disorders of cerebral cortical development, a cohort of 54 patients demonstrating neuroradiologic signs of MCDs was investigated. Individual genomes were interrogated for single-nucleotide variants (SNV) and copy number variants (CNV) with whole-exome sequencing and chromosomal microarray studies. Variation affecting known MCDs-associated genes was found in 16/54 cases, including 11 patients with SNV, 2 patients with CNV, and 3 patients with both CNV and SNV, at distinct loci. Diagnostic pathogenic SNV and potentially damaging variants of unknown significance (VUS) were identified in two groups of seven individuals each. We demonstrated that de novo variants are important among patients with MCDs as they were identified in 10/16 individuals with a molecular diagnosis. Three patients showed changes in known MCDs genes  and a clinical phenotype beyond the usual characteristics observed, i.e., phenotypic expansion, for a particular known disease gene clinical entity. We also discovered 2 likely candidate genes, CDH4, and ASTN1, with human and animal studies supporting their roles in brain development, and 5 potential candidate genes. Our findings emphasize genetic heterogeneity of MCDs disorders and postulate potential novel candidate genes involved in cerebral cortical development.
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