Human Genetic Disorders of Axon Guidance

  1. Elizabeth C. Engle
  1. Departments of Neurology, Ophthalmology, and Medicine, FM Kirby Neurobiology Center, Program in Genomics, and The Manton Center for Orphan Disease Research, Children’s Hospital Boston, Massachusetts 02115-5737
  1. Correspondence: elizabeth.engle{at}childrens.harvard.edu

Abstract

This article reviews symptoms and signs of aberrant axon connectivity in humans, and summarizes major human genetic disorders that result, or have been proposed to result, from defective axon guidance. These include corpus callosum agenesis, L1 syndrome, Joubert syndrome and related disorders, horizontal gaze palsy with progressive scoliosis, Kallmann syndrome, albinism, congenital fibrosis of the extraocular muscles type 1, Duane retraction syndrome, and pontine tegmental cap dysplasia. Genes mutated in these disorders can encode axon growth cone ligands and receptors, downstream signaling molecules, and axon transport motors, as well as proteins without currently recognized roles in axon guidance. Advances in neuroimaging and genetic techniques have the potential to rapidly expand this field, and it is feasible that axon guidance disorders will soon be recognized as a new and significant category of human neurodevelopmental disorders.

Footnotes

  • Editors: Marc Tessier-Lavigne and Alex L. Kolodkin

  • Additional Perspectives on Neuronal Guidance available at www.cshperspectives.org



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      1. Cold Spring Harb. Perspect. Biol. 2: a001784 Copyright © 2010 Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press; all rights reserved

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