4.8 Article

Biallelic mutations in human DCC cause developmental split-brain syndrome

Journal

NATURE GENETICS
Volume 49, Issue 4, Pages 606-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ng.3804

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Repository Core for Neurological Disorders, Department of Neurology
  2. Boston Children's Hospital
  3. IDDRC [NIH P30HD018655, P30 HD018655]
  4. National Medical Research Council, Singapore
  5. Singhealth-Duke NUS Paediatric Academic Programme Nurturing Clinician Scientist Scheme
  6. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [T32GM07753]
  7. National Institutes of Health Ruth L. Kirschstein National Research Service Award [5T32 (GM007226-39)]
  8. NEI [R01EY12498]
  9. Manton Center for Orphan Disease Research
  10. National Institute of Mental Health [R01MH083565]
  11. National institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [R01NS032457, R01NS035129]
  12. Simons Foundation
  13. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  14. Nancy Lurie Marks Foundation

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Motor, sensory, and integrative activities of the brain are coordinated by a series of midline-bridging neuronal commissures whose development is tightly regulated. Here we report a new human syndrome in which these commissures are widely disrupted, thus causing clinical manifestations of horizontal gaze palsy, scoliosis, and intellectual disability. Affected individuals were found to possess biallelic loss-of-function mutations in the gene encoding the axon-guidance receptor 'deleted in colorectal carcinoma' (DCC), which has been implicated in congenital mirror movements when it is mutated in the heterozygous state but whose biallelic loss-of-function human phenotype has not been reported. Structural MRI and diffusion tractography demonstrated broad disorganization of white-matter tracts throughout the human central nervous system (CNS), including loss of all commissural tracts at multiple levels of the neuraxis. Combined with data from animal models, these findings show that DCC is a master regulator of midline crossing and development of white-matter projections throughout the human CNS.

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