4.7 Article

Human Mutations in NDE1 Cause Extreme Microcephaly with Lissencephaly

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 88, Issue 5, Pages 536-547

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2011.04.003

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Dubai-Harvard Foundation for Medical Research
  2. King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology [10-MED941-20/Saudi Arabia]
  3. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [T32 GM007726-35]
  4. National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression
  5. NICHD [R01HD56380]
  6. Schweppe Foundation
  7. NINDS, Fogarty International Center [RO1 NS 32457, R21 NS061772]
  8. Manton Center for Orphan Disease Research
  9. National Library of Medicine Family Foundation
  10. Simons Foundation
  11. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [HHSN268200782096C, NIH N01-HG-65403]
  12. Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Centers [P30 HD18655]
  13. National Human Genome Research Institute

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Genes disrupted in human microcephaly (meaning small brain) define key regulators of neural progenitor proliferation and cell-fate specification. In comparison, genes mutated in human lissencephaly (lissos means smooth and cephalos means brain) highlight critical regulators of neuronal migration. Here, we report two families with extreme microcephaly and grossly simplified cortical gyral structure, a condition referred to as microlissencephaly, and show that they carry homozygous frameshift mutations in NDE1, which encodes a multidomain protein that localizes to the centrosome and mitotic spindle poles. Both human mutations in NDE1 truncate the C-terminal NDE1 domains, which are essential for interactions with cytoplasmic dynein and thus for regulation of cytoskeletal dynamics in mitosis and for cell-cycle-dependent phosphorylation of NDE1 by Cdk1. We show that the patient NDE1 proteins are unstable, cannot bind cytoplasmic dynein, and do not localize properly to the centrosome. Additionally, we show that CDK1 phosphorylation at T246, which is within the C-terminal region disrupted by the mutations, is required for cell-cycle progression from the G2 to the M phase. The role of NDE1 in cell-cycle progression probably contributes to the profound neuronal proliferation defects evident in Nde1-null mice and patients with NDE1 mutations, demonstrating the essential role of NDE1 in human cerebral cortical neurogenesis.

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