J Pediatr Genet 2022; 11(01): 074-080
DOI: 10.1055/s-0040-1714716
Case Report

Two Novel Compound Heterozygous ADGRG1/GPR56 Mutations Associated with Diffuse Cerebral Polymicrogyria

1   Department of Pediatrics, Armed Forces Medical College, Pune, Maharashtra, India
,
Uday B. Kovilapu
2   Department of Radiodiagnosis, Armed Forces Medical College, Pune, Maharashtra, India
,
Amit Devgan
1   Department of Pediatrics, Armed Forces Medical College, Pune, Maharashtra, India
,
1   Department of Pediatrics, Armed Forces Medical College, Pune, Maharashtra, India
› Author Affiliations
Funding None.

Abstract

Background Polymicrogyria (PMG) has environmental or genetic etiologies. We report a 8-year-old boy with diffuse PMG and two novel adhesion G protein-coupled receptor G1 (ADGRG1)/G protein-coupled receptor 56 (GPR56) mutations.

Case Report The proband has intellectual disability, spastic quadriparesis, and intractable epilepsy without antenatal or perinatal insults. Brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed PMG involving fronto-polar, parietal and occipital lobes with decreasing antero-posterior gradient, and a thinned-out brain stem. Targeted exome sequencing identified two novel compound heterozygote ADGRG1/GPR56 mutations (c.C209T and c.1010dupT), and each parent carries one of these mutations. Subsequent pregnancy was terminated because the fetus had the same mutations.

Conclusion The detected mutations expanded the genetic etiology of PMG and helped the family to avoid another child with this devastating condition.



Publication History

Received: 16 April 2020

Accepted: 27 June 2020

Article published online:
29 July 2020

© 2020. Thieme. All rights reserved.

Georg Thieme Verlag KG
Rüdigerstraße 14, 70469 Stuttgart, Germany

 
  • References

  • 1 Jansen A, Andermann E. Genetics of the polymicrogyria syndromes. J Med Genet 2005; 42 (05) 369-378
  • 2 Stutterd CA, Leventer RJ. Polymicrogyria: a common and heterogeneous malformation of cortical development. Am J Med Genet C Semin Med Genet 2014; 166C (02) 227-239
  • 3 Leventer RJ, Jansen A, Pilz DT. et al. Clinical and imaging heterogeneity of polymicrogyria: a study of 328 patients. Brain 2010; 133 (Pt 5): 1415-1427
  • 4 Himmelmann K, Horber V, De La Cruz J. et al; SCPE Working Group. MRI classification system (MRICS) for children with cerebral palsy: development, reliability, and recommendations. Dev Med Child Neurol 2017; 59 (01) 57-64
  • 5 Gulati S, Sondhi V. Cerebral palsy: an overview. Indian J Pediatr 2018; 85 (11) 1006-1016
  • 6 Stutterd CA, Dobyns WB, Jansen A, Mirzaa G, Leventer RJ. Polymicrogyria overview. GeneReviews® [Internet]. Seattle: University of Washington; 2018
  • 7 Robin NH, Taylor CJ, McDonald-McGinn DM. et al. Polymicrogyria and deletion 22q11.2 syndrome: window to the etiology of a common cortical malformation. Am J Med Genet A 2006; 140 (22) 2416-2425
  • 8 Piao X, Chang BS, Bodell A. et al. Genotype-phenotype analysis of human frontoparietal polymicrogyria syndromes. Ann Neurol 2005; 58 (05) 680-687
  • 9 Luo R, Yang HM, Jin Z. et al. A novel GPR56 mutation causes bilateral frontoparietal polymicrogyria. Pediatr Neurol 2011; 45 (01) 49-53
  • 10 Sawal HA, Harripaul R, Mikhailov A. et al. Three mutations in the bilateral frontoparietal polymicrogyria gene GPR56 in Pakistani intellectual disability families. J Pediatr Genet 2018; 7 (02) 60-66
  • 11 Santos-Silva R, Passas A, Rocha C. et al. Bilateral frontoparietal polymicrogyria: a novel GPR56 mutation and an unusual phenotype. Neuropediatrics 2015; 46 (02) 134-138
  • 12 Parrini E, Ferrari AR, Dorn T, Walsh CA, Guerrini R. Bilateral frontoparietal polymicrogyria, Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, and GPR56 gene mutations. Epilepsia 2009; 50 (06) 1344-1353
  • 13 Piao X, Hill RS, Bodell A. et al. G protein-coupled receptor-dependent development of human frontal cortex. Science 2004; 303 (5666): 2033-2036
  • 14 Bae BI, Tietjen I, Atabay KD. et al. Evolutionarily dynamic alternative splicing of GPR56 regulates regional cerebral cortical patterning. Science 2014; 343 (6172): 764-768
  • 15 Quattrocchi CC, Zanni G, Napolitano A. et al. Conventional magnetic resonance imaging and diffusion tensor imaging studies in children with novel GPR56 mutations: further delineation of a cobblestone-like phenotype. Neurogenetics 2013; 14 (01) 77-83
  • 16 Desai NA, Udani V. GPR56-related polymicrogyria: clinicoradiologic profile of 4 patients. J Child Neurol 2015; 30 (13) 1819-1823
  • 17 Fujii Y, Ishikawa N, Kobayashi Y, Kobayashi M, Kato M. Compound heterozygosity in GPR56 with bilateral frontoparietal polymicrogyria. Brain Dev 2014; 36 (06) 528-531
  • 18 Bahi-Buisson N, Poirier K, Boddaert N. et al. GPR56-related bilateral frontoparietal polymicrogyria: further evidence for an overlap with the cobblestone complex. Brain 2010; 133 (11) 3194-3209
  • 19 Fredriksson R, Lagerström MC, Lundin LG, Schiöth HB. The G-protein-coupled receptors in the human genome form five main families. Phylogenetic analysis, paralogon groups, and fingerprints. Mol Pharmacol 2003; 63 (06) 1256-1272
  • 20 Kwakkenbos MJ, Kop EN, Stacey M. et al. The EGF-TM7 family: a postgenomic view. Immunogenetics 2004; 55 (10) 655-666
  • 21 Liu M, Parker RM, Darby K. et al. GPR56, a novel secretin-like human G-protein-coupled receptor gene. Genomics 1999; 55 (03) 296-305
  • 22 Zendman AJ, Cornelissen IM, Weidle UH, Ruiter DJ, van Muijen GN. TM7XN1, a novel human EGF-TM7-like cDNA, detected with mRNA differential display using human melanoma cell lines with different metastatic potential. FEBS Lett 1999; 446 (2-3): 292-298