Neuropathology of holoprosencephaly Fallet‐Bianco, Catherine
American journal of medical genetics. Part C, Seminars in medical genetics,
June 2018, 2018-06-00, 20180601, Volume:
178, Issue:
2
Journal Article
Holoprosencephaly (HPE) is a primary disorder of neural induction and patterning of the rostral neural tube resulting in noncleavage of the forebrain with failure to form two separate distinct ...hemispheres. The spectrum of HPE is very broad and encompasses various neuropathological phenotypes of different severity. The recent literature has demonstrated that the phenotypic variability of HPE ranges from aprosencephaly–atelencephaly, at the most severe end, to milder forms such as the “middle interhemispheric variant” of HPE at the less severe end of the spectrum. Between them, different intermediate forms demonstrate a continuum in a wide phenotypic spectrum rather than well‐defined categories. Although the term “HPE” suggests a disorder affecting only the prosencephalon, other brain structures are involved, underlining the complexity of the malformation. Because of close spatiotemporal interactions and common signaling pathways contributing to the development of both brain and face, concomitant facial and ocular anomalies are associated with brain malformation. In this review, the characteristic neuropathological features of the various forms of HPE are described as well as their associated brain, face, and ocular malformations, to delineate the different phenotypes.
Complex cortical malformations associated with mutations in tubulin genes: TUBA1A, TUBA8, TUBB2B, TUBB3, TUBB5 and TUBG1 commonly referred to as tubulinopathies, are a heterogeneous group of ...conditions with a wide spectrum of clinical severity. Among the 106 patients selected as having complex cortical malformations, 45 were found to carry mutations in TUBA1A (42.5%), 18 in TUBB2B (16.9%), 11 in TUBB3 (10.4%), three in TUBB5 (2.8%), and three in TUBG1 (2.8%). No mutations were identified in TUBA8. Systematic review of patients' neuroimaging and neuropathological data allowed us to distinguish at least five cortical malformation syndromes: (i) microlissencephaly (n = 12); (ii) lissencephaly (n = 19); (iii) central pachygyria and polymicrogyria-like cortical dysplasia (n = 24); (iv) generalized polymicrogyria-like cortical dysplasia (n = 6); and (v) a 'simplified' gyral pattern with area of focal polymicrogyria (n = 19). Dysmorphic basal ganglia are the hallmark of tubulinopathies (found in 75% of cases) and are present in 100% of central pachygyria and polymicrogyria-like cortical dysplasia and simplified gyral malformation syndromes. Tubulinopathies are also characterized by a high prevalence of corpus callosum agenesis (32/80; 40%), and mild to severe cerebellar hypoplasia and dysplasia (63/80; 78.7%). Foetal cases (n = 25) represent the severe end of the spectrum and show specific abnormalities that provide insights into the underlying pathophysiology. The overall complexity of tubulinopathies reflects the pleiotropic effects of tubulins and their specific spatio-temporal profiles of expression. In line with previous reports, this large cohort further clarifies overlapping phenotypes between tubulinopathies and although current structural data do not allow prediction of mutation-related phenotypes, within each mutated gene there is an associated predominant pattern of cortical dysgenesis allowing some phenotype-genotype correlation. The core phenotype of TUBA1A and TUBG1 tubulinopathies are lissencephalies and microlissencephalies, whereas TUBB2B tubulinopathies show in the majority, centrally predominant polymicrogyria-like cortical dysplasia. By contrast, TUBB3 and TUBB5 mutations cause milder malformations with focal or multifocal polymicrogyria-like cortical dysplasia with abnormal and simplified gyral pattern.
Amoeboid microglial subpopulations visualized by antibodies against ionized calcium‐binding adapter molecule 1, CD68, and CD45 enter the forebrain starting at 4.5 postovulatory or gestational weeks ...(gw). They penetrate the telencephalon and diencephalon via the meninges, choroid plexus, and ventricular zone. Early colonization by amoeboid microglia–macrophages is first restricted to the white matter, where these cells migrate and accumulate in patches at the junctions of white‐matter pathways, such as the three junctions that the internal capsule makes with the thalamocortical projection, external capsule and cerebral peduncle, respectively. In the cerebral cortex anlage, migration is mainly radial and tangential towards the immature white matter, subplate layer, and cortical plate, whereas pial cells populate the prospective layer I. A second wave of microglial cells penetrates the brain via the vascular route at about 12–13 gw and remains confined to the white matter. Two main findings deserve emphasis. First, microglia accumulate at 10–12 gw at the cortical plate–subplate junction, where the first synapses are detected. Second, microglia accumulate in restricted laminar bands, most notably around 19–30 gw, at the axonal crossroads in the white matter (semiovale centre) rostrally, extending caudally in the immature white matter to the visual radiations. This accumulation of proliferating microglia is located at the site of white‐matter injury in premature neonates. The spatiotemporal organization of microglia in the immature white and grey matter suggests that these cells may play active roles in developmental processes such as axonal guidance, synaptogenesis, and neurodevelopmental apoptosis as well as in injuries to the developing brain, in particular in the periventricular white‐matter injury of preterm infants.
The ryanodine receptor 1 (RYR1) is a calcium release channel essential for excitation‐contraction coupling in the sarcoplasmic reticulum of skeletal muscles. Dominant variants in the RYR1 have been ...well associated with the known pharmacogenetic ryanodinopathy and malignant hyperthermia. With the era of next‐generation gene sequencing and growing number of causative variants, the spectrum of ryanodinopathies has been evolving with dominant and recessive variants presenting with RYR1‐related congenital myopathies such as central core disease, minicore myopathy with external ophthalmoplegia, core‐rod myopathy, and congenital neuromuscular disease. Lately, the spectrum was broadened to include fetal manifestations, causing a rare recessive and lethal form of fetal akinesia deformation sequence syndrome (FADS)/arthrogryposis multiplex congenita (AMC) and lethal multiple pterygium syndrome. Here we broaden the spectrum of clinical manifestations associated with homozygous/compound heterozygous RYR1 gene variants to include a wide range of manifestations from FADS through neonatal hypotonia to a 35‐year‐old male with AMC and PhD degree. We report five unrelated families in which three presented with FADS. One of these families was consanguineous and had three affected fetuses with FADS, one patient with neonatal hypotonia who is alive, and one individual with AMC who is 35 years old with normal intellectual development and uses a wheelchair. Muscle biopsies on these cases demonstrated a variety of histopathological abnormalities, which did not assist with the diagnostic process. Neither the affected living individuals nor the parents who are obligate heterozygotes had history of malignant hyperthermia.
Studies of periventricular white matter injury (PWMI) in preterm infants suggest the involvement of the transient cortical subplate zone. We studied the cortical wall of non‐cystic and cystic PWMI ...cases and controls. Non‐cystic PWMI corresponded to diffuse white matter lesions, the predominant injury currently detected by imaging. Glial cell populations were analyzed in post‐mortem human frontal lobes from very preterm 24–29 postconceptional weeks (pcw) and preterm infants (30–34 pcw) using immunohistochemistry for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), monocarboxylate transporter 1 (MCT1), ionized calcium‐binding adapter molecule 1 (Iba1), CD68 and oligodendrocyte lineage (Olig2). Glial activation extended into the subplate in non‐cystic PWMI but was restricted to the white matter in cystic PWMI. Two major age‐related and laminar differences were observed in non‐cystic PWMI: in very preterm cases, activated microglial cells were increased and extended into the subplate adjacent to the lesion, whereas in preterm cases, an astroglial reaction was seen not only in the subplate but throughout the cortical plate. There were no differences in Olig2‐positive pre‐oligodendrocytes in the subplate in PWMI cases compared with controls. The involvement of gliosis in the deep subplate supports the concept of the complex cellular vulnerability of the subplate zone during the preterm period and may explain widespread changes in magnetic resonance signal intensity in early PWMI.
ABSTRACTDisabilities after brain injury in very preterm infants have mainly been attributed to noncystic periventricular white matter injury (PWMI). We analyzed spatiotemporal patterns of PWMI in the ...brains of 18 very preterm infants (25–29 postconceptional weeks pcw), 7 preterm infants (30–34 pcw), and 10 preterm controls without PWMI. In very preterm infants, we examined PWMI in detail in 2 axonal crossroad areas in the frontal lobeC1 (lateral to the lateral angle of the anterior horn of the lateral ventricle, at the exit of the internal capsule radiations) and C2 (above the corpus callosum and dorsal angle of the anterior horn). These brains had greater microglia-macrophage densities and activation but lesser astroglial reaction (glial fibrillary acidic protein and monocarboxylate transporter 1 expression) than in preterm cases with PWMI. In preterm infants, scattered necrotic foci were rimmed by axonal spheroids and ionized calcium binding adaptor molecule 1–positive macrophages. Diffuse lesions near these foci consisted primarily of hypertrophic and reactive astrocytes associated with fewer microglia. No differences in Olig2-positive preoligodendrocytes between noncystic PWMI and control cases were found. These data show that the growing axonal crossroad areas are highly vulnerable to PWMI in very preterm infants and highlight differences in glial activation patterns between very preterm and preterm infants.
RING Finger Protein 113 A (RNF113A, MIM 300951) is a highly conserved gene located on chromosome Xq24‐q25, encoding a protein containing two conserved zinc finger domains involved in DNA alkylation ...repair and premessenger RNA splicing. To date, only one pathogenic variant of RNF113A, namely c.901C>T; p.Gln301Ter, has been reported in humans by Tarpey et al. in 2009. Thereafter, Corbett et al. stated that this variant was responsible for an X‐linked form of nonphotosensitive trichothiodystrophy associated with profound intellectual disability, microcephaly, partial corpus callosum agenesis, microphallus, and absent or rudimentary testes. This variant was then shown to alter DNA alkylation repair, providing an additional argument supporting its pathogenicity and important clues about the underlying pathophysiology of nonphotosensitive trichothiodystrophy. Using exome sequencing, we identified exactly the same RNF113A variant in two fetuses affected with abnormalities similar to those previously reported by Corbett et al. To our knowledge, this is the second report of a RNF113A pathogenic variant in humans.
Epilepsy and mental retardation, originally of unknown cause, are now known to result from many defects including cortical malformations, neuronal circuitry disorders and perturbations of neuronal ...communication and synapse function. Genetic approaches in combination with MRI and related imaging techniques continually allow a re‐evaluation and better classification of these disorders. Here we review our current understanding of some of the primary defects involved, with insight from recent molecular biology advances, the study of mouse models and the results of neuropathology analyses. Through these studies the molecular determinants involved in the control of neuron number, neuronal migration, generation of cortical laminations and convolutions, integrity of the basement membrane at the pial surface, and the establishment of neuronal circuitry are being elucidated. We have attempted to integrate these results with the available data concerning, in particular, human brain development, and to emphasize the limitations in some cases of extrapolating from rodent models. Taking such species differences into account is clearly critical for understanding the pathophysiological mechanisms associated with these disorders.
Fetal anomalies represent a poorly studied group of developmental disorders. Our objective was to assess the impact of whole-exome sequencing (WES) on the investigation of these anomalies.
We ...performed WES in 101 fetuses or stillborns who presented prenatally with severe anomalies, including renal a/dysgenesis, VACTERL association (vertebral defects, anal atresia, cardiac defects, tracheoesophageal fistula, renal anomalies, and limb abnormalities), brain anomalies, suspected ciliopathies, multiple major malformations, and akinesia.
A molecular diagnosis was obtained in 19 cases (19%). In 13 of these cases, the diagnosis was not initially suspected by the clinicians because the phenotype was nonspecific or atypical, corresponding in some cases to the severe end of the spectrum of a known disease (e.g., MNX1-, RYR1-, or TUBB-related disorders). In addition, we identified likely pathogenic variants in genes (DSTYK, ACTB, and HIVEP2) previously associated with phenotypes that were substantially different from those found in our cases. Finally, we identified variants in novel candidate genes that were associated with perinatal lethality, including de novo mutations in GREB1L in two cases with bilateral renal agenesis, which represents a significant enrichment of such mutations in our cohort.
Our study opens a window on the distinctive genetic landscape associated with fetal anomalies and highlights the power—but also the challenges—of WES in prenatal diagnosis.