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The genetic landscape of familial congenital hydrocephalus
Author(s) -
Shaheen Ranad,
Sebai Mohammed Adeeb,
Patel Nisha,
Ewida Nour,
Kurdi Wesam,
Altweijri Ikhlass,
Sogaty Sameera,
Almardawi Elham,
Seidahmed Mohammed Zain,
Alnemri Abdulrahman,
Madirevula Sateesh,
Ibrahim Niema,
Abdulwahab Firdous,
Hashem Mais,
AlSheddi Tarfa,
Alomar Rana,
Alobeid Eman,
Sallout Bahauddin,
AlBaqawi Badi,
AlAali Wajeih,
Ajaji Nouf,
Lesmana Harry,
Hopkin Robert J.,
Dupuis Lucie,
MendozaLondono Roberto,
Al Rukban Hadeel,
Yoon Grace,
Faqeih Eissa,
Alkuraya Fowzan S.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
annals of neurology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.764
H-Index - 296
eISSN - 1531-8249
pISSN - 0364-5134
DOI - 10.1002/ana.24964
Subject(s) - hydrocephalus , genetics , exome sequencing , congenital hydrocephalus , etiology , genetic heterogeneity , medicine , ciliopathies , pediatrics , biology , mutation , pathology , phenotype , gene , surgery
Objective Congenital hydrocephalus is an important birth defect, the genetics of which remains incompletely understood. To date, only 4 genes are known to cause Mendelian diseases in which congenital hydrocephalus is the main or sole clinical feature, 2 X‐linked ( L1CAM and AP1S2 ) and 2 autosomal recessive ( CCDC88C and MPDZ ). In this study, we aimed to determine the genetic etiology of familial congenital hydrocephalus with the assumption that these cases represent Mendelian forms of the disease. Methods Exome sequencing combined, where applicable, with positional mapping. Results We identified a likely causal mutation in the majority of these families (21 of 27, 78%), spanning 16 genes, none of which is X‐linked. Ciliopathies and dystroglycanopathies were the most common etiologies of congenital hydrocephalus in our cohort (19% and 26%, respectively). In 1 family with 4 affected members, we identified a homozygous truncating variant in EML1 , which we propose as a novel cause of congenital hydrocephalus in addition to its suggested role in cortical malformation. Similarly, we show that recessive mutations in WDR81 , previously linked to cerebellar ataxia, mental retardation, and disequilibrium syndrome 2, cause severe congenital hydrocephalus. Furthermore, we confirm the previously reported candidacy of MPDZ by presenting a phenotypic spectrum of congenital hydrocephalus associated with 5 recessive alleles. Interpretation Our study highlights the importance of recessive mutations in familial congenital hydrocephalus and expands the locus heterogeneity of this condition. Ann Neurol 2017;81:890–897