All foetuses with lissencephaly and cerebellar hypoplasia carried distinct TUBA1A mutations, while those with classical lissencephaly harbored recurrent mutations in TUBA1A (3 cases) or TUBB2B (1 case).
Mutations of TUBA1A gene were first identified as causing a distinctive neuroradiologic phenotype characterized by cortical abnormalities ranging from classical lissencephaly to perisylvian pachygyria with dysgenetic corpus callosum, brainstem and cerebellum.
We estimate the frequency of mutation in TUBA1A gene in patients with classical lissencephaly to be approximately 4%, and although not as common as mutations in the LIS1 or DCX genes, mutation analysis in TUBA1A should be included in the molecular genetic diagnosis of classical lissencephaly, particularly in patients with the combination of features highlighted in this paper.