Lissencephaly spectrum (LIS) is one of the most severe neuronal migration disorders that ranges from agyria/pachygyria to
subcortical band heterotopia. Approximately 80% of patients with the LIS spectrum carry mutations in either the
LIS1 or
DCX (
doublecortin) genes which have an opposite gradient of severity. The aim of the study was to evaluate in detail the phenotype of
DCX-associated lissencephaly and to look for genotype–phenotype correlations. Of the 180 male patients with
DCX-related lissencephaly, 33 males (24 familial cases and nine cases with de novo mutations) were found with hemizygous
DCX mutations and were clinically and genetically assessed here.
DCX mutation analysis revealed that the majority of mutations were missense (79.2%), clustered in the two evolutionary conserved
domains, N-DC and C-DC, of DCX. The most prominent radiological phenotype was an anteriorly predominant pachygyria or agyria
(54.5%) although
DCX-associated lissencephaly encompasses a complete range of LIS grades. The severity of neurological impairment was in accordance
with the degree of agyria with severe cognitive impairment in all patients, inability to walk independently in over half and
refractory epilepsy in more than a third. For genotype–phenotype correlations, patients were divided in two groups according
to the location of
DCX missense mutations. Patients with mutations in the C-DC domain tended to have a less severe lissencephaly (grade 4–5 in 58.3%)
compared with those in the N-DC domain (grade 4–5 in 36.3%) although, in this dataset, this was not statistically significant
(
p = 0.12). Our evaluation suggests a putative correlation between phenotype and genotype. These data provide further clues
to deepen our understanding of the function of the DCX protein and may give new insights into the molecular mechanisms that
could influence the consequence of the mutation in the N-DC versus the C-DC domain of DCX.
Keywords Lissencephaly - X-linked - Doublecortin - Migrational disorders