Titomanlio Luigi, Pierri Nicola Brunetti, Romano Alfonso, Imperati Floriana, Borrelli Melissa, Barletta Valentina, Diano Alvaro Antonio, Castaldo Imma, Santoro Lucio, Del Giudice Ennio
Clinical Genetics Unit, Hôpital Robert Debré, University Paris VII, France.
Am J Med Genet A. 2005 Jul 15;136(2):198-200. doi: 10.1002/ajmg.a.30795.
Cerebellar vermis aplasia (ACV, OMIM 117360) is a rare malformation of the cerebellum, with only few familial patients reported so far. Main clinical features of this rare disorder include floppiness and delayed milestones in early infancy, preceding mild cerebellar ataxia, non-progressive clinical course, normal or slightly delayed intelligence, and occasional nystagmus. Neuroimaging reveals selective involvement of the cerebellum, which is prominent in the vermis. Because of the large preponderance of female patients, X-linked dominant transmission was suggested by [Fenichel and Phillips (1989); Arch Neurol 46:582-583], and subsequent reports only concern female patients. Only one family with male-to-male transmission presenting with a generalized atrophy of the cerebellum rather than a more localized vermis aplasia has been reported so far. We report on a family in which father and son are affected by a mild form of ACV, thus confirming an autosomal mode of inheritance of the disease. Our patients showed a progressive improvement of their motor abilities, neurological examination of the father being actually normal except for a mild mental retardation. We also evaluated the potential role of two candidate genes, EN2 and ZIC1, responsible for abnormal cerebellar development in murine knock-out models. However, molecular analysis failed to reveal any causative mutation in the coding sequence of the two genes in our patients. The understanding of the genetic basis of autosomal dominant ACV would allow a better classification of isolate cerebellar malformations and might permit to understand cell differentiation and migration in the developing central nervous system.
小脑蚓部发育不全(ACV,OMIM 117360)是一种罕见的小脑畸形,迄今为止仅有少数家族性患者的报道。这种罕见疾病的主要临床特征包括婴儿早期的肌张力低下和发育里程碑延迟,随后出现轻度小脑性共济失调、临床病程非进行性、智力正常或轻度延迟,以及偶尔出现眼球震颤。神经影像学检查显示小脑有选择性受累,以蚓部最为明显。由于女性患者占绝大多数,Fenichel和Phillips(1989年)[《神经病学文献》46:582 - 583]提出了X连锁显性遗传,随后的报道仅涉及女性患者。迄今为止,仅报道了一个家族,其男性与男性之间的传递表现为小脑广泛性萎缩,而非更局限的蚓部发育不全。我们报告了一个家族,父亲和儿子均患有轻度形式的ACV,从而证实了该疾病的常染色体遗传模式。我们的患者运动能力逐渐改善,除轻度智力发育迟缓外,父亲的神经系统检查实际上正常。我们还评估了两个候选基因EN2和ZIC1在小鼠基因敲除模型中对小脑发育异常的潜在作用。然而,分子分析未能在我们患者的这两个基因编码序列中发现任何致病突变。了解常染色体显性ACV的遗传基础将有助于更好地对孤立性小脑畸形进行分类,并可能有助于理解发育中的中枢神经系统中的细胞分化和迁移。