Somatic Mutations Activating the mTOR Pathway in Dorsal Telencephalic Progenitors Cause a Continuum of Cortical Dysplasias

Alissa M. D’Gama(Broad Institute), Mollie B. Woodworth(Broad Institute), Amer A. Hossain(Broad Institute), Sara Bizzotto(Broad Institute), Nicole E. Hatem(Broad Institute), Christopher M. LaCoursiere(Boston Children's Hospital), Imad Najm(Cleveland Clinic), Zhong Ying(Cleveland Clinic), Edward Yang(Boston Children's Hospital), A. James Barkovich(University of California, San Francisco), David J. Kwiatkowski(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Harry V. Vinters(University of California, Los Angeles), Joseph R. Madsen(Boston Children's Hospital), Gary W. Mathern(University of California, Los Angeles), Ingmar Blümcke(Cleveland Clinic), Annapurna Poduri(Boston Children's Hospital), Christopher A. Walsh(Broad Institute)
Cell Reports
December 1, 2017
Cited by 333Open Access
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Abstract

Focal cortical dysplasia (FCD) and hemimegalencephaly (HME) are epileptogenic neurodevelopmental malformations caused by mutations in mTOR pathway genes. Deep sequencing of these genes in FCD/HME brain tissue identified an etiology in 27 of 66 cases (41%). Radiographically indistinguishable lesions are caused by somatic activating mutations in AKT3, MTOR, and PIK3CA and germline loss-of-function mutations in DEPDC5, NPRL2, and TSC1/2, including TSC2 mutations in isolated HME demonstrating a "two-hit" model. Mutations in the same gene cause a disease continuum from FCD to HME to bilateral brain overgrowth, reflecting the progenitor cell and developmental time when the mutation occurred. Single-cell sequencing demonstrated mTOR activation in neurons in all lesions. Conditional Pik3ca activation in the mouse cortex showed that mTOR activation in excitatory neurons and glia, but not interneurons, is sufficient for abnormal cortical overgrowth. These data suggest that mTOR activation in dorsal telencephalic progenitors, in some cases specifically the excitatory neuron lineage, causes cortical dysplasia.


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