Congenital Microcephaly: A Debate on Diagnostic Challenges and Etiological Paradigm of the Shift from Isolated/Non-Syndromic to Syndromic Microcephaly

Cells. 2023 Feb 16;12(4):642. doi: 10.3390/cells12040642.

Abstract

Congenital microcephaly (CM) exhibits broad clinical and genetic heterogeneity and is thus categorized into several subtypes. However, the recent bloom of disease-gene discoveries has revealed more overlaps than differences in the underlying genetic architecture for these clinical sub-categories, complicating the differential diagnosis. Moreover, the mechanism of the paradigm shift from a brain-restricted to a multi-organ phenotype is only vaguely understood. This review article highlights the critical factors considered while defining CM subtypes. It also presents possible arguments on long-standing questions of the brain-specific nature of CM caused by a dysfunction of the ubiquitously expressed proteins. We argue that brain-specific splicing events and organ-restricted protein expression may contribute in part to disparate clinical manifestations. We also highlight the role of genetic modifiers and de novo variants in the multi-organ phenotype of CM and emphasize their consideration in molecular characterization. This review thus attempts to expand our understanding of the phenotypic and etiological variability in CM and invites the development of more comprehensive guidelines.

Keywords: MCPH; brain-specific splicing events; congenital microcephaly (CM); genetic modifiers; isolat-ed/non-syndromic; microcephaly primary hereditary; multi-organ phenotype of CM; syndromic microcephaly.

Publication types

  • Review
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Brain
  • Genetic Heterogeneity
  • Humans
  • Microcephaly* / genetics
  • Phenotype

Grants and funding

This work was funded by the Koeln Fortune Program (Faculty of Medicine, University of Cologne; 381/2020 to M.S.H) and the Center for Molecular Medicine Cologne (CMMC) (Projects 38-RP and C12; 2635/8029/01 and 2635/8326/01 to P.N. and M.S.H.).