1. Academic Validation
  2. Mutations in WDR62, encoding a centrosome-associated protein, cause microcephaly with simplified gyri and abnormal cortical architecture

Mutations in WDR62, encoding a centrosome-associated protein, cause microcephaly with simplified gyri and abnormal cortical architecture

  • Nat Genet. 2010 Nov;42(11):1015-20. doi: 10.1038/ng.683.
Timothy W Yu 1 Ganeshwaran H Mochida David J Tischfield Sema K Sgaier Laura Flores-Sarnat Consolato M Sergi Meral Topçu Marie T McDonald Brenda J Barry Jillian M Felie Christine Sunu William B Dobyns Rebecca D Folkerth A James Barkovich Christopher A Walsh
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Division of Genetics, Department of Medicine, Children's Hospital Boston, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Abstract

Genes associated with human microcephaly, a condition characterized by a small brain, include critical regulators of proliferation, cell fate and DNA repair. We describe a syndrome of congenital microcephaly and diverse defects in cerebral cortical architecture. Genome-wide linkage analysis in two families identified a 7.5-Mb locus on chromosome 19q13.12 containing 148 genes. Targeted high throughput sequence analysis of linked genes in each family yielded > 4,000 DNA variants and implicated a single gene, WDR62, as harboring potentially deleterious changes. We subsequently identified additional WDR62 mutations in four other families. Magnetic resonance imaging and postmortem brain analysis supports important roles for WDR62 in the proliferation and migration of neuronal precursors. WDR62 is a WD40 repeat-containing protein expressed in neuronal precursors as well as in postmitotic neurons in the developing brain and localizes to the spindle poles of dividing cells. The diverse phenotypes of WDR62 suggest it has central roles in many aspects of cerebral cortical development.

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