EML1-associated brain overgrowth syndrome with ribbon-like heterotopia
Oegema, Renske; McGillivray, George; Leventer, Richard; Le Moing, Anne-Gaëlle; Bahi-Buisson, Nadia; Barnicoat, Angela; Mandelstam, Simone; Francis, David; Francis, Fiona; Mancini, Grazia M S; Savelberg, Sanne; van Haaften, Gijs; Mankad, Kshitij; Lequin, Maarten H
(2019) American Journal of Medical Genetics. Part C, Seminars in Medical Genetics, volume 181, issue 4, pp. 627 - 637
(Article)
Abstract
EML1 encodes the protein Echinoderm microtubule-associated protein-like 1 or EMAP-1 that binds to the microtubule complex. Mutations in this gene resulting in complex brain malformations have only recently been published with limited clinical descriptions. We provide further clinical and imaging details on three previously published families, and describe two novel
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unrelated individuals with a homozygous partial EML1 deletion and a homozygous missense variant c.760G>A, p.(Val254Met), respectively. From review of the clinical and imaging data of eight individuals from five families with biallelic EML1 variants, a very consistent imaging phenotype emerges. The clinical syndrome is characterized by mainly neurological features including severe developmental delay, drug-resistant seizures and visual impairment. On brain imaging there is megalencephaly with a characteristic ribbon-like subcortical heterotopia combined with partial or complete callosal agenesis and an overlying polymicrogyria-like cortical malformation. Several of its features can be recognized on prenatal imaging especially the abnormaly formed lateral ventricles, hydrocephalus (in half of the cases) and suspicion of a neuronal migration disorder. In conclusion, biallelic EML1 disease-causing variants cause a highly specific pattern of congenital brain malformations, severe developmental delay, seizures and visual impairment.
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Keywords: EML1, gray matter heterotopia, hydrocephalus, megalencephaly, polymicrogyria, ribbon-like heterotopia, Genetics(clinical), Genetics, Journal Article
ISSN: 1552-4868
Publisher: Wiley-Liss Inc.
Note: Funding Information: supported by Inserm, Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS), Sorbonne Université, the JTC 2015 Neurodevelopmental Disorders affiliated with the ANR (for NEURON8‐Full‐ 815‐006 STEM‐MCD, to FF, NBB) and the Fondation Maladies Rares/Phenomin (project IR4995, FF). Funding information Funding Information: We thank the families described herein for their collaboration. We also thank Fowzan Alkuraya and Ranad Shaheen (King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Center, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia) for sharing the imaging of Individual 7. Roy Sanders (UMC Utrecht) has helped with drafting the figures. FF is associated with the BioPsy Labex project and the Ecole des Neurosciences de Paris Ile-de-France (ENP) network, supported by Inserm, Centre national de la recherche scientifique (CNRS), Sorbonne Universit?, the JTC 2015 Neurodevelopmental Disorders affiliated with the ANR (for NEURON8-Full-815-006 STEM-MCD, to FF, NBB) and the Fondation Maladies Rares/Phenomin (project IR4995, FF). Publisher Copyright: © 2019 The Authors. American Journal of Medical Genetics Part C: Seminars in Medical Genetics published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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