Home
Scholarly Works
Variants in CLDN5 cause a syndrome characterized...
Journal article

Variants in CLDN5 cause a syndrome characterized by seizures, microcephaly and brain calcifications

Abstract

The blood-brain barrier ensures CNS homeostasis and protection from injury. Claudin-5 (CLDN5), an important component of tight junctions, is critical for the integrity of the blood-brain barrier. We have identified de novo heterozygous missense variants in CLDN5 in 15 unrelated patients who presented with a shared constellation of features including developmental delay, seizures (primarily infantile onset focal epilepsy), microcephaly and a recognizable pattern of pontine atrophy and brain calcifications. All variants clustered in one subregion/domain of the CLDN5 gene and the recurrent variants demonstrate genotype-phenotype correlations. We modelled both patient variants and loss of function alleles in the zebrafish to show that the variants analogous to those in patients probably result in a novel aberrant function in CLDN5. In total, human patient and zebrafish data provide parallel evidence that pathogenic sequence variants in CLDN5 cause a novel neurodevelopmental disorder involving disruption of the blood-brain barrier and impaired neuronal function.

Authors

Deshwar AR; Cytrynbaum C; Murthy H; Zon J; Chitayat D; Volpatti J; Newbury-Ecob R; Ellard S; Allen HL; Yu EP

Journal

Brain, Vol. 146, No. 6, pp. 2285–2297

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Publication Date

June 1, 2023

DOI

10.1093/brain/awac461

ISSN

0006-8950

Contact the Experts team