Molecular genetics of human microcephaly
- 1 April 2001
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Current Opinion in Neurology
- Vol. 14 (2) , 151-156
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00019052-200104000-00003
Abstract
Human microcephaly comprises a heterogeneous group of conditions that are characterized by a failure of normal brain growth. Microcephaly can be caused by many injurious or degenerative conditions, or by developmental malformations in which the growth of the brain is impaired as a result of defects in pattern formation, cell proliferation, cell survival, cell differentiation, or cell growth. These latter forms of congenital microcephaly are frequently inherited, usually as recessive traits, and are associated with mental retardation and sometimes epilepsy. Some of the genes that cause congenital microcephaly are likely to control crucial aspects of neural development, and may also be involved in the evolutionary explosion of cortical size that characterizes primates. There has recently been a rapid advance in the use of genetic mapping techniques to identify genetic loci responsible for microcephaly. Although several loci have been mapped, the condition is clearly genetically and clinically heterogeneous.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Patient Mutations in Doublecortin Define a Repeated Tubulin-binding DomainJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2000
- Missense mutation in PAK3, R67C, causes X-linked nonspecific mental retardationAmerican Journal of Medical Genetics, 2000
- Mutations in TGIF cause holoprosencephaly and link NODAL signalling to human neural axis determinationNature Genetics, 2000
- Diagnostic analysis of the Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome: five cosmids should be used for microdeletion detection and low number of protein truncating mutationsJournal of Medical Genetics, 2000
- Mutational Spectrum in the Δ7-Sterol Reductase Gene and Genotype-Phenotype Correlation in 84 Patients with Smith-Lemli-Opitz SyndromeAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2000
- Analysis of lissencephaly‐causing LIS1 mutationsEuropean Journal of Biochemistry, 1999
- The Mutational Spectrum of the Sonic Hedgehog Gene in Holoprosencephaly: SHH Mutations Cause a Significant Proportion of Autosomal Dominant HoloprosencephalyHuman Molecular Genetics, 1999
- Mutations in the homeodomain of the human SIX3 gene cause holoprosencephalyNature Genetics, 1999
- Holoprosencephaly due to mutations in ZIC2, a homologue of Drosophila odd-pairedNature Genetics, 1998
- PAK3 mutation in nonsyndromic X-linked mental retardationNature Genetics, 1998