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Lisencefalia clássica
ORPHA:102009CID-11 · LD20.1DOENÇA RARA

A síndrome de Miller-Dieker é uma doença genética que em 80% dos casos há deleção nova e os 20% restantes herdam um cromossomo com a deleção de um dos pais. É uma deleção de 1.5 Mb no braço curto do cromossomo 17, caracterizada por um defeito no desenvolvimento do cérebro devido à migração neuronal incompleta. As principais características são lisencefalia clássica e características faciais distintinas.

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Introdução

O que você precisa saber de cara

📋

Lisencefalia clássica é uma malformação cerebral rara caracterizada por ausência de sulcos corticais, associada a atraso de crescimento, disfagia, crises motoras e anormalidades cardiovasculares. Pode apresentar testa alta e nefropatia, com alterações no EEG e atrofia cortical.

Publicações científicas
23 artigos
Último publicado: 1993
🏥
SUS: Sem cobertura SUSScore: 0%
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Sinais e sintomas

O que aparece no corpo e com que frequência cada sintoma acontece

Partes do corpo afetadas

🧠
Neurológico
42 sintomas
😀
Face
8 sintomas
📏
Crescimento
7 sintomas
❤️
Coração
5 sintomas
🦴
Ossos e articulações
5 sintomas
🫃
Digestivo
3 sintomas

+ 48 sintomas em outras categorias

Características mais comuns

Disfagia
Cisterna silviana aumentada
Crise motora
Anormalidade do sistema cardiovascular
Anormalidade do lábio superior
Anormalidade no EEG
130sintomas
Sem dados (130)

Os sintomas variam de pessoa para pessoa. Abaixo estão as 130 características clínicas mais associadas, ordenadas por frequência.

DisfagiaDysphagia
Cisterna silviana aumentadaEnlarged sylvian cistern
Crise motoraMotor seizure
Anormalidade do sistema cardiovascularAbnormality of the cardiovascular system
Anormalidade do lábio superiorAbnormality of upper lip

Linha do tempo da pesquisa

Publicações por ano — veja quando o interesse científico cresceu
Anos de pesquisa1desde 2025
Total histórico23PubMed
Últimos 10 anos14publicações
Pico20244 papers
Linha do tempo
2025Hoje · 2026🧪 2019Primeiro ensaio clínico📈 2024Ano de pico
Publicações por ano (últimos 10 anos)

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Genética e causas

O que está alterado no DNA e como passa nas famílias

Genes associados

4 genes identificados com associação a esta condição.

PAFAH1B1Platelet-activating factor acetylhydrolase IB subunit betaDisease-causing germline mutation(s) inAltamente restrito
FUNÇÃO

Regulatory subunit (beta subunit) of the cytosolic type I platelet-activating factor (PAF) acetylhydrolase (PAF-AH (I)), an enzyme that catalyzes the hydrolyze of the acetyl group at the sn-2 position of PAF and its analogs and participates in PAF inactivation. Regulates the PAF-AH (I) activity in a catalytic dimer composition-dependent manner (By similarity). Required for proper activation of Rho GTPases and actin polymerization at the leading edge of locomoting cerebellar neurons and postmigra

LOCALIZAÇÃO

Cytoplasm, cytoskeletonCytoplasm, cytoskeleton, microtubule organizing center, centrosomeCytoplasm, cytoskeleton, spindleNucleus membrane

VIAS BIOLÓGICAS (10)
Amplification of signal from unattached kinetochores via a MAD2 inhibitory signalRHO GTPases Activate ForminsMitotic PrometaphaseEML4 and NUDC in mitotic spindle formationResolution of Sister Chromatid Cohesion
MECANISMO DE DOENÇA

Lissencephaly 1

A classical lissencephaly. It is characterized by agyria or pachygyria and disorganization of the clear neuronal lamination of normal six-layered cortex. The cortex is abnormally thick and poorly organized with 4 primitive layers. Associated with enlarged and dysmorphic ventricles and often hypoplasia of the corpus callosum.

EXPRESSÃO TECIDUAL(Ubíquo)
Cérebro - Hemisfério cerebelar
168.8 TPM
Cerebelo
131.0 TPM
Testículo
125.6 TPM
Brain Frontal Cortex BA9
94.1 TPM
Artéria tibial
93.4 TPM
OUTRAS DOENÇAS (4)
lissencephaly due to LIS1 mutationMiller-Dieker lissencephaly syndromesubcortical band heterotopiachromosome 17p13.3 duplication syndrome
HGNC:8574UniProt:P43034
YWHAE14-3-3 protein epsilonCandidate gene tested inAltamente restrito
FUNÇÃO

Adapter protein implicated in the regulation of a large spectrum of both general and specialized signaling pathways (PubMed:21189250). Binds to a large number of partners, usually by recognition of a phosphoserine or phosphothreonine motif (PubMed:35343654). Binding generally results in the modulation of the activity of the binding partner (By similarity). Positively regulates phosphorylated protein HSF1 nuclear export to the cytoplasm (PubMed:12917326). Plays a positive role in the antiviral si

LOCALIZAÇÃO

NucleusCytoplasmMelanosome

VIAS BIOLÓGICAS (10)
Recruitment of mitotic centrosome proteins and complexesLoss of proteins required for interphase microtubule organization from the centrosomeLoss of Nlp from mitotic centrosomesRegulation of PLK1 Activity at G2/M TransitionAURKA Activation by TPX2
EXPRESSÃO TECIDUAL(Ubíquo)
Cérebro - Hemisfério cerebelar
592.3 TPM
Brain Spinal cord cervical c-1
579.8 TPM
Brain Frontal Cortex BA9
577.0 TPM
Fibroblastos
492.8 TPM
Brain Anterior cingulate cortex BA24
483.1 TPM
OUTRAS DOENÇAS (5)
distal 17p13.3 microdeletion syndromeMiller-Dieker lissencephaly syndromechromosome 17p13.3 duplication syndromeclear cell sarcoma of kidney
HGNC:12851UniProt:P62258
HIC1Hypermethylated in cancer 1 proteinCandidate gene tested inRestrito
FUNÇÃO

Transcriptional repressor (PubMed:12052894, PubMed:15231840). Recognizes and binds to the consensus sequence '5-[CG]NG[CG]GGGCA[CA]CC-3' (PubMed:15231840). May act as a tumor suppressor (PubMed:20154726). Involved in development of head, face, limbs and ventral body wall (By similarity). Involved in down-regulation of SIRT1 and thereby is involved in regulation of p53/TP53-dependent apoptotic DNA-damage responses (PubMed:16269335). The specific target gene promoter association seems to be depend

LOCALIZAÇÃO

Nucleus

VIAS BIOLÓGICAS (1)
SUMOylation of transcription factors
EXPRESSÃO TECIDUAL(Ubíquo)
Ovário
30.1 TPM
Útero
28.4 TPM
Cervix Endocervix
25.2 TPM
Fallopian Tube
24.4 TPM
Cervix Ectocervix
21.2 TPM
OUTRAS DOENÇAS (1)
Miller-Dieker lissencephaly syndrome
HGNC:4909UniProt:Q14526
DCXNeuronal migration protein doublecortinDisease-causing germline mutation(s) inAltamente restrito
FUNÇÃO

Microtubule-associated protein required for initial steps of neuronal dispersion and cortex lamination during cerebral cortex development. May act by competing with the putative neuronal protein kinase DCLK1 in binding to a target protein. May in that way participate in a signaling pathway that is crucial for neuronal interaction before and during migration, possibly as part of a calcium ion-dependent signal transduction pathway. May be part with PAFAH1B1/LIS-1 of overlapping, but distinct, sign

LOCALIZAÇÃO

CytoplasmCell projection, neuron projection

VIAS BIOLÓGICAS (1)
Neurofascin interactions
MECANISMO DE DOENÇA

Lissencephaly, X-linked 1

A classic lissencephaly characterized by intellectual disability and seizures that are more severe in male patients. Affected boys show an abnormally thick cortex with absent or severely reduced gyri. Clinical manifestations include feeding problems, abnormal muscular tone, seizures and severe to profound psychomotor retardation. Female patients display a less severe phenotype referred to as 'doublecortex'.

VIAS REACTOME (1)
EXPRESSÃO TECIDUAL(Baixa expressão)
Brain Frontal Cortex BA9
2.7 TPM
Hipotálamo
2.2 TPM
Brain Anterior cingulate cortex BA24
2.1 TPM
Brain Nucleus accumbens basal ganglia
2.0 TPM
Córtex cerebral
2.0 TPM
OUTRAS DOENÇAS (2)
lissencephaly type 1 due to doublecortin gene mutationsubcortical band heterotopia
HGNC:2714UniProt:O43602

Variantes genéticas (ClinVar)

495 variantes patogênicas registradas no ClinVar.

🧬 PAFAH1B1: NM_000430.4(PAFAH1B1):c.13C>T (p.Gln5Ter) ()
🧬 PAFAH1B1: NM_000430.4(PAFAH1B1):c.400-2A>G ()
🧬 PAFAH1B1: NM_000430.4(PAFAH1B1):c.404G>A (p.Trp135Ter) ()
🧬 PAFAH1B1: GRCh37/hg19 17p13.3(chr17:2316531-2972634)x1 ()
🧬 PAFAH1B1: NM_000430.4(PAFAH1B1):c.1159+6T>C ()
Ver todas no ClinVar

Classificação de variantes (ClinVar)

Distribuição de 4 variantes classificadas pelo ClinVar.

3
1
Patogênica (75.0%)
Benigna (25.0%)
VARIANTES MAIS SIGNIFICATIVAS
LAMB1: NM_002291.3(LAMB1):c.5066_5072delCTTTAGA [Pathogenic]
LAMB1: NC_000007.13:g.(107626809_107635331)_(107635406_107638801)del [Pathogenic]
LAMB1: NM_002291.3(LAMB1):c.4188+1G>C [Pathogenic/Likely pathogenic]
PAFAH1B1: NM_000430.4(PAFAH1B1):c.1070C>G (p.Ala357Gly) [Likely benign]

Diagnóstico

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Tratamento e manejo

Remédios, cuidados de apoio e o que precisa acompanhar

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Onde tratar no SUS

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Ensaios clínicos abertos e novidades científicas recentes

Pesquisa e ensaios clínicos

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Publicações mais relevantes

Timeline de publicações
15 papers (10 anos)
#1

"Hair-on-end" appearance in thickened cortex in a case of classic lissencephaly due to DCX gene mutation.

Neurological sciences : official journal of the Italian Neurological Society and of the Italian Society of Clinical Neurophysiology2025 Jul

X-linked lissencephaly is associated with a hemizygous mutation in DCX gene located on the X-chromosome. DCX mutation causes classic lissencephaly in males and subcortical laminar heterotopia in females. Neuronal migration arrest leads to pachygyria and the arrested neurons are noted along the path of neuronal migration between the periventricular region and the cortex. Diffusion tensor imaging in cases of lissencephaly shows abnormal radial arrangement of fibers within the cortex in a "hairon-end" pattern. We demonstrate this "hair-on-end" pattern of fibers within the thickened cortex in a case of lissencephaly due to a pathogenic mutation in DCX gene confirmed on next generation whole exome sequencing.

#2

Characterization of the Epileptogenic Phenotype and Response to Antiseizure Medications in Lissencephaly Patients.

Neuropediatrics2024 Dec

Patients with lissencephaly typically present with severe psychomotor retardation and drug-resistant seizures. The aim of this study was to characterize the epileptic phenotype in a genotypically and radiologically well-defined patient cohort and to evaluate the response to antiseizure medication (ASM). Therefore, we retrospectively evaluated 47 patients of five genetic forms (LIS1/PAFAH1B1, DCX, DYNC1H1, TUBA1A, TUBG1) using family questionnaires, standardized neuropediatric assessments, and patients' medical reports. All but two patients were diagnosed with epilepsy. Median age at seizure onset was 6 months (range: 2.1-42.0), starting with epileptic spasms in 70%. Standard treatment protocols with hormonal therapy (ACTH or corticosteroids) and/or vigabatrin were the most effective approach for epileptic spasms, leading to seizure control in 47%. Seizures later in the disease course were most effectively treated with valproic acid and lamotrigine, followed by vigabatrin and phenobarbital, resulting in seizure freedom in 20%. Regarding psychomotor development, lissencephaly patients presenting without epileptic spasms were significantly more likely to reach various developmental milestones compared to patients with spasms. Classic lissencephaly is highly associated with drug-resistant epilepsy starting with epileptic spasms in most patients. The standard treatment protocols for infantile epileptic spasms syndrome lead to freedom from seizures in around half of the patients. Due to the association of epileptic spasms with an unfavorable course of psychomotor development, early and reliable diagnosis and treatment of spasms should be pursued. For epilepsies occurring later in childhood, ASM with valproic acid and lamotrigine, followed by vigabatrin and phenobarbital, appears to be most effective.

#3

Multiplex Consanguineous Family Highlights CLASP1 as a Candidate Gene for Lissencephaly.

Neurology. Genetics2024 Aug

Noncentrosomal microtubules are essential cytoskeletal filaments that are important for neurite formation, axonal transport, and neuronal migration. They require stabilization by microtubule minus-end-targeting proteins including the CLASP family of molecules. To date, no human monogenic disorder has been associated with the CLASP1 gene. In this study, we aimed to delineate the clinical and neuroradiologic phenotype associated with biallelic CLASP1 variants. We analyzed clinical characteristics, MRI data, and genotypes of a cohort of 3 patients with homozygous variants in CLASP1. Homozygous CLASP1 variant is associated with primary microcephaly, severe neurodevelopmental delay, and early-onset refractory epilepsy. The neuroradiologic phenotype comprises a highly recognizable combination of classic lissencephaly, with the posterior gradient more severe than the anterior gradient, a thin/hypoplastic splenium of the corpus callosum, mild enlargement of the lateral ventricles primarily posteriorly with a squared pattern, and pontine hypoplasia. This study underscores the role of CLASP1 in brain development and suggests that the identified variant disrupts CLASP1 interaction with the microtubule cytoskeleton, contributing to lissencephaly pathogenesis.

#4

Lissencephaly and Advanced-Stage Congenital Cytomegalovirus Infection in a Neonate.

Cureus2024 Jun

This case report investigates the management of a 24-week-old neonate with congenital cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection and its sequelae, including severe intrauterine growth restriction, thrombocytopenia, and brain anomalies, ultimately progressing to lissencephaly. The diagnostic challenges included delayed clinical suspicion of congenital CMV, which was not identified until after delivery through CMV DNA polymerase chain reaction, and differentiating its symptoms from other potential causes of the neonate's condition. Aggressive interventions included antibiotics, antiviral therapy with ganciclovir, and supportive measures such as intubation, CPR, respiratory support, blood transfusions, and management of coagulopathy. Despite these efforts, the patient deteriorated due to progressive hypoperfusion, hypoxemic cardiorespiratory failure, and disseminated intravascular coagulopathy. Due to the poor prognosis and extent of multiorgan damage, support was withdrawn per parental consent. This case highlights the complications encountered when managing an advanced-stage neonatal CMV infection and emphasizes the importance of a multidisciplinary and holistic approach to guide diagnosis and treatment.

#5

Leveraging multiple approaches for the detection of pathogenic deep intronic variants in developmental and epileptic encephalopathies: A case report.

Epilepsia open2024 Apr

About 50% of individuals with developmental and epileptic encephalopathies (DEEs) are unsolved following genetic testing. Deep intronic variants, defined as >100 bp from exon-intron junctions, contribute to disease by affecting the splicing of mRNAs in clinically relevant genes. Identifying deep intronic pathogenic variants is challenging and resource intensive, and interpretation is difficult due to limited functional annotations. We aimed to identify deep intronic variants in individuals suspected to have unsolved single gene DEEs. In a research cohort of unsolved cases of DEEs, we searched for children with a DEE syndrome predominantly caused by variants in specific genes in >80% of described cases. We identified two children with Dravet syndrome and one individual with classic lissencephaly. Multiple sequencing and bioinformatics strategies were employed to interrogate intronic regions in SCN1A and PAFAH1B1. A novel de novo deep intronic 12 kb deletion in PAFAH1B1 was identified in the individual with lissencephaly. We showed experimentally that the deletion disrupts mRNA splicing, which results in partial intron retention after exon 2 and disruption of the highly conserved LisH motif. We demonstrate that targeted interrogation of deep intronic regions using multiple genomics technologies, coupled with functional analysis, can reveal hidden causes of unsolved monogenic DEE syndromes. PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY: Deep intronic variants can cause disease by affecting the splicing of mRNAs in clinically relevant genes. A deep intronic deletion that caused abnormal splicing of the PAFAH1B1 gene was identified in a patient with classic lissencephaly. Our findings reinforce that targeted interrogation of deep intronic regions and functional analysis can reveal hidden causes of unsolved epilepsy syndromes.

Publicações recentes

Ver todas no PubMed

📚 EuropePMC6 artigos no totalmostrando 14

2025

"Hair-on-end" appearance in thickened cortex in a case of classic lissencephaly due to DCX gene mutation.

Neurological sciences : official journal of the Italian Neurological Society and of the Italian Society of Clinical Neurophysiology
2024

Characterization of the Epileptogenic Phenotype and Response to Antiseizure Medications in Lissencephaly Patients.

Neuropediatrics
2024

Multiplex Consanguineous Family Highlights CLASP1 as a Candidate Gene for Lissencephaly.

Neurology. Genetics
2024

Lissencephaly and Advanced-Stage Congenital Cytomegalovirus Infection in a Neonate.

Cureus
2024

Leveraging multiple approaches for the detection of pathogenic deep intronic variants in developmental and epileptic encephalopathies: A case report.

Epilepsia open
2023

Anesthetic Management and Bispectral Index in a Child with Miller-Dieker Syndrome: A Case Report.

Children (Basel, Switzerland)
2023

PAFAH1B1 Gene Deletion-Associated Classic Lissencephaly and Infantile Spasms.

Neurology India
2022

Bi-allelic CAMSAP1 variants cause a clinically recognizable neuronal migration disorder.

American journal of human genetics
2021

Human cytomegalovirus infection is associated with increased expression of the lissencephaly gene PAFAH1B1 encoding LIS1 in neural stem cells and congenitally infected brains.

The Journal of pathology
2017

Mutations of KIF5C cause a neurodevelopmental disorder of infantile-onset epilepsy, absent language, and distinctive malformations of cortical development.

American journal of medical genetics. Part A
2017

A novel recurrent LIS1 splice site mutation in classic lissencephaly.

American journal of medical genetics. Part A
2017

Recurrent KIF2A mutations are responsible for classic lissencephaly.

Neurogenetics
2015

A Case of Concurrent Miller-Dieker Syndrome (17p13.3 Deletion) and 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome.

Journal of pediatric genetics
2016

LIS1-associated classic lissencephaly: A retrospective, multicenter survey of the epileptogenic phenotype and response to antiepileptic drugs.

Brain & development

Associações

Organizações que acompanham esta doença — pra ter apoio e orientação

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Comunidades

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Doenças relacionadas

Doenças com sintomas parecidos — ajudam quem ainda está buscando diagnóstico

Ordenadas pelo número de sintomas em comum.

Referências e fontes

Bases de dados externas citadas neste artigo

Publicações científicas

Artigos indexados no PubMed ligados a esta doença no grafo RarasNet — título, periódico e PMID direto da fonte, sem intermediação de IA.

  1. "Hair-on-end" appearance in thickened cortex in a case of classic lissencephaly due to DCX gene mutation.
    Neurological sciences : official journal of the Italian Neurological Society and of the Italian Society of Clinical Neurophysiology· 2025· PMID 40192980mais citado
  2. Characterization of the Epileptogenic Phenotype and Response to Antiseizure Medications in Lissencephaly Patients.
    Neuropediatrics· 2024· PMID 39214127mais citado
  3. Multiplex Consanguineous Family Highlights CLASP1 as a Candidate Gene for Lissencephaly.
    Neurology. Genetics· 2024· PMID 39040917mais citado
  4. Lissencephaly and Advanced-Stage Congenital Cytomegalovirus Infection in a Neonate.
    Cureus· 2024· PMID 38962590mais citado
  5. Leveraging multiple approaches for the detection of pathogenic deep intronic variants in developmental and epileptic encephalopathies: A case report.
    Epilepsia open· 2024· PMID 38129960mais citado
  6. DCX-Related Disorders.
    · 1993· PMID 20301364recente

Bases de dados e fontes oficiais

Identificadores e referências canônicas usadas para montar este verbete.

  1. ORPHA:102009(Orphanet)
  2. MONDO:0015146(MONDO)
  3. GARD:5049(GARD (NIH))
  4. Variantes catalogadas(ClinVar)
  5. Busca completa no PubMed(PubMed)
  6. Q56013691(Wikidata)

Dados compilados pelo RarasNet a partir de fontes abertas (Orphanet, OMIM, MONDO, PubMed/EuropePMC, ClinicalTrials.gov, DATASUS, PCDT/MS). Este conteúdo é informativo e não substitui avaliação médica.

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Lisencefalia clássica
Compêndio · Raras BR

Lisencefalia clássica

ORPHA:102009 · MONDO:0015146
CID-11
MedGen
UMLS
C0431375
EuropePMC
Wikidata
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