Genetic clues found for common congenital brain disorder, Dandy Walker malformation

Main Category: Genetics
Article Date: 23 Aug 2004 - 0:00 PDT

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'Genetic clues found for common congenital brain disorder, Dandy Walker malformation'

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Thanks to a productive collaboration between clinical and basic scientists, researchers from the University of Chicago have identified the first genetic cause of one of the most common birth defects of the brain, Dandy-Walker malformation (DWM). Infants with this disorder, about one in 10,000 births, have a small, displaced cerebellum and other brain abnormalities that can reduce coordination, impair mental function and cause hydrocephalus.

In the September, 2004, issue of Nature Genetics -- to be published online August 22 -- the researchers show that in humans, loss of one copy of each of two adjacent genes, known as ZIC1 and ZIC4, causes Dandy-Walker. The researchers then used this finding to create a mouse model to allow them to study the developmental basis of the disorder.

"Dandy-Walker malformation is an important clinical problem as well as a scientific mystery," said study co-author William Dobyns, M.D., professor of human genetics, neurology and pediatrics at the University of Chicago and an author of the study. "We see about 20 cases per year, but until recently, there was not even an understanding that Dandy-Walker had a genetic basis."

"Knowing more about the genes also should improve our ability to make a prenatal diagnosis," he added, "which has always relied upon ultrasound. Finding the genes will help us inform parents about the risks of having another affected child."

"This discovery provides one of the first real avenues for understanding human birth defects that affect the cerebellum," said study author Kathleen Millen, Ph.D., assistant professor of human genetics at the University of Chicago. "Until now, we have had no understanding of what goes wrong during development to cause this malformation. We now know some of the genes involved and have a mouse model to study to figure this out."

This work may also have broader implications. Understanding what goes wrong in Dandy-Walker malformation could provide clues about autism, in which similar but much milder cerebellar abnormalities are common. The hunt for the Dandy-Walker genes began when a child from Kansas with a missing piece of chromosome 3 was found to have DWM and was referred to Dr. Dobyns for an evaluation. Inspired by this clue, Inessa Grinberg, an M.D./Ph.D. student working with Millen and Dobyns, began to scour the Internet looking for parent support web sites for children with DWM, and for separate web sites for parents of children with chromosome 3 abnormalities.

The team eventually found eight patients -- including five found via the Internet -- who had overlapping deletions of genetic material from chromosome 3. This narrowed the search to one part of that chromosome. Although the implicated region contained an estimated 15 genes, two were likely candidates. ZIC1, short for Zinc finger in cerebellum 1, was a known gene that played a role in development of the cerebellum in mice. ZIC4 was previously uncharacterized but was similar to ZIC1.

When the researchers generated mice with altered ZIC1 and ZIC4 genes they found a syndrome virtually identical to the human disorder. Mice with one dysfunctional copy of either gene had mild anatomic abnormalities but no behavioral changes. But about 15 percent of the mice that had one normal and one abnormal version of both ZIC1 and ZIC4 had abnormalities in the cerebellum that were very similar to the brains of patients with Dandy-Walker. They also lacked coordination and were unable to right themselves if they fell over.

Although the authors conclude that "heterozygous loss of ZIC1 and ZIC4 is the cause of Dandy-Walker malformation in deletion 3q2 patients," they caution that other genes are clearly involved, which is why only 15 percent of the mice with the characteristic deletions had severe symptoms. "The genetics of Dandy-Walker are very complicated," said Dr. Millen.

"We still don't know all we want to know about this disorder," added Dobyns, "but now we have a foot in the door for understanding this and other cerebellar defects."

A genetic test could improve prenatal diagnosis. Currently, detecting Dandy-Walker with ultrasound images is difficult and often uncertain until late in a pregnancy, usually after 20 weeks. Most parents, fearing mental retardation, choose to terminate the pregnancy if the disorder is diagnosed soon enough. A reliable genetic test could provide better information earlier and could be used to reassure parents that a subsequent pregnancy was normal.

The story of Dandy-Walker malformation has come full circle, note the authors. The name comes from the physicians Walter Dandy of Johns Hopkins, and Earl Walker, who was a neurosurgeon at the University of Chicago in 1942 when he described the malformation that was subsequently named after him.

"Finding these genes here at the University of Chicago is a kind of 'coming home' story," Millen said.

The National Institutes of Health, the Brain Research Foundation of Chicago and the Ragins-Goldsmith Fund supported the research. Additional authors include Hope Northrup of the University of Texas, Holly Ardinger of the University of Kansas, and Chitra Prasad of the London Health Sciences Center, of Ontario, Canada.

Contact: John Easton
jeaston@uchospitals.edu
773-702-6241
University of Chicago Medical Center

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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Visitor Opinions (latest shown first)

DWM

posted by April on 10 Aug 2011 at 4:05 am

My daughter was not diagnoised until she was 6 months. She is now 9 mon. and delayed quite a bit. She has almost no cerebellum and a huge cyst. She also has an extra piece in chrome 1. The genetics doc couldn't tell us what that did. Any ideas????

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Normal child

posted by anon on 20 Jul 2011 at 11:36 am

Our daughter will be six years old in August. We discovered Dandy Walker (Variant) via ultrasound before she was born. She is a normal kid, just completed kindergarten. She may need a shunt due to some hydrocephalus. Perhaps this is the difference between Dandy Walker Variant and Dandy Walker Malformation.

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DWM - genetic connection?

posted by megan on 18 Apr 2011 at 7:18 pm

I read this article with interest as my 10 year was diagnosed with DWM when I was 16 weeks pregnant. He was slow in some milestones at preschool age, but has no real problems at school - in fact he is doing really well.
I was just wondering if there was any link between this and problems with bed wetting. He has had a number of hypospadias repairs.

Is it time to revisit the genetics team at wellington hospital in new zealand?

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DW Malformation

posted by Anup on 25 Jul 2010 at 11:51 pm

Dear Ms.Dawn Olson, my wife had to terminate her pregnancy recently at 4.5 months because the doctors diagnosed the baby with DW malformation and hydrcephalus. We never had any knowledge about this and most doctors in India that we met also did not have full knowledge on this except that the child would not be normal and mentally retarded. It was the most difficult decision that we have had to make in our entire life but the doctors advise that we should discontinue the pregnancy because the child would go through a lot of suffering and there would be very little that we will be able to do to reduce his pain and sufferings. We would like to know what are the chances that our next baby will be normal?

What are the day to day problems that a DW child has to go through? Is there any treatment that can reduce the sufferings of the DW child.

Thanks and regards

Anup

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Mother Of A Dandy-Walker Child

posted by Dawn Olson on 19 Jan 2008 at 12:00 pm

This is a very interesting article. When my son was diagnosed with DW in 10/1999, we went through a lot of testing. They had no clue what caused DW. I was blamed for not feeding my child because he was 1 1/2 months old and diagnosed with failure to thrive.

Then we went to St. Mary's Hospital in Rochester, MN where they did a ct of his brain to rule out any disorders of the brain. Instead of ruling it out it confirmed my son had DW. They had not seen a DW child for over 10 years and my son was the hot news of the hospital for doctor's.

A neurologist did a seminar of DW to a lot of doctor's, nurses and staff. They had no clue what happened. They said it was a fluke and couldn't find any chromosomal defects. It's interesting to know that there are people looking into it. It's nice to know that it could be a genetic problem.

My son is now 8 1/2 years old and they didn't think he'd live to be 5 years old because DW is a piece to the puzzle. He is considered profoundly mentally retarded. I would be interested in more information on DW. My son didn't develop the mid-line of the cerebulum. He is the sweetest little boy that everyone loves. If you would like to contact me, you can do so by the email address listed above. Thank you very much for this article. It brings some hope to people dealing with a rare and complicated disorder.

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