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Structural brain anomalies in patients with FOXG1 syndrome and in Foxg1+/- mice

Authors :
Milka, Pringsheim
Diana, Mitter
Simone, Schröder
Rita, Warthemann
Kim, Plümacher
Gerhard, Kluger
Martina, Baethmann
Thomas, Bast
Sarah, Braun
Hans-Martin, Büttel
Elizabeth, Conover
Carolina, Courage
Alexandre N, Datta
Angelika, Eger
Theresa A, Grebe
Annette, Hasse-Wittmer
Marion, Heruth
Karen, Höft
Angela M, Kaindl
Stephanie, Karch
Torsten, Kautzky
Georg C, Korenke
Bernd, Kruse
Richard E, Lutz
Heymut, Omran
Steffi, Patzer
Heike, Philippi
Keri, Ramsey
Tina, Rating
Angelika, Rieß
Mareike, Schimmel
Rachel, Westman
Frank-Martin, Zech
Birgit, Zirn
Pauline A, Ulmke
Godwin, Sokpor
Tran, Tuoc
Andreas, Leha
Martin, Staudt
Knut, Brockmann
HUSLAB
Medicum
Department of Medical and Clinical Genetics
University of Helsinki
Source :
Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Objective FOXG1 syndrome is a rare neurodevelopmental disorder associated with heterozygous FOXG1 variants or chromosomal microaberrations in 14q12. The study aimed at assessing the scope of structural cerebral anomalies revealed by neuroimaging to delineate the genotype and neuroimaging phenotype associations. Methods We compiled 34 patients with a heterozygous (likely) pathogenic FOXG1 variant. Qualitative assessment of cerebral anomalies was performed by standardized re-analysis of all 34 MRI data sets. Statistical analysis of genetic, clinical and neuroimaging data were performed. We quantified clinical and neuroimaging phenotypes using severity scores. Telencephalic phenotypes of adult Foxg1+/- mice were examined using immunohistological stainings followed by quantitative evaluation of structural anomalies. Results Characteristic neuroimaging features included corpus callosum anomalies (82%), thickening of the fornix (74%), simplified gyral pattern (56%), enlargement of inner CSF spaces (44%), hypoplasia of basal ganglia (38%), and hypoplasia of frontal lobes (29%). We observed a marked, filiform thinning of the rostrum as recurrent highly typical pattern of corpus callosum anomaly in combination with distinct thickening of the fornix as a characteristic feature. Thickening of the fornices was not reported previously in FOXG1 syndrome. Simplified gyral pattern occurred significantly more frequently in patients with early truncating variants. Higher clinical severity scores were significantly associated with higher neuroimaging severity scores. Modeling of Foxg1 heterozygosity in mouse brain recapitulated the associated abnormal cerebral morphology phenotypes, including the striking enlargement of the fornix. Interpretation Combination of specific corpus callosum anomalies with simplified gyral pattern and hyperplasia of the fornices is highly characteristic for FOXG1 syndrome.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....9276898e4ccb621327463e48c5639f79