Somatic Mutations in Cerebral Cortical Malformations

Somatic mutations can cause brain malformations but may escape detection if their prevalence in blood is low. The authors of this study used deep-coverage targeting sequencing to gauge the extent to which somatic mutations cause relatively common forms of brain malformation. Somatic mutation, a post...

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Veröffentlicht in:The New England journal of medicine 2014-08, Vol.371 (8), p.733-743
Hauptverfasser: Jamuar, Saumya S, Lam, Anh-Thu N, Kircher, Martin, D’Gama, Alissa M, Wang, Jian, Barry, Brenda J, Zhang, Xiaochang, Hill, Robert Sean, Partlow, Jennifer N, Rozzo, Aldo, Servattalab, Sarah, Mehta, Bhaven K, Topcu, Meral, Amrom, Dina, Andermann, Eva, Dan, Bernard, Parrini, Elena, Guerrini, Renzo, Scheffer, Ingrid E, Berkovic, Samuel F, Leventer, Richard J, Shen, Yiping, Wu, Bai Lin, Barkovich, A. James, Sahin, Mustafa, Chang, Bernard S, Bamshad, Michael, Nickerson, Deborah A, Shendure, Jay, Poduri, Annapurna, Yu, Timothy W, Walsh, Christopher A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Somatic mutations can cause brain malformations but may escape detection if their prevalence in blood is low. The authors of this study used deep-coverage targeting sequencing to gauge the extent to which somatic mutations cause relatively common forms of brain malformation. Somatic mutation, a postzygotic event, leads to two or more populations of cells with distinct genotypes in an organism, despite development from a single fertilized egg. 1 , 2 Although the role of somatic mutation in cancer cells is well established, 3 an analogous role for somatic mutations that occur randomly during the normal mitotic cell divisions of embryonic development — and that are therefore present in clones of cells in one or more tissues of the body — has been recognized only recently. Somatic mutations have been described in several noncancerous disorders, including the McCune–Albright syndrome, 4 the Sturge–Weber syndrome, 5 the Proteus syndrome, . . .
ISSN:0028-4793
1533-4406
DOI:10.1056/NEJMoa1314432