Abstract

BackgroundLissencephaly is a rare developmental brain disorder in veterinary and human medicine associated with defects in neuronal migration leading to a characteristic marked reduction or absence of the convolutional pattern of the cerebral hemispheres. In many human cases the disease has a genetic basis. In sheep, brain malformations, mainly cerebellar hypoplasia and forms of hydrocephalus, are frequently due to in utero viral infections. Although breed-related malformations of the brain have been described in sheep, breed-related lissencephaly has not been previously recorded in a peer reviewed publication.ResultsHere we report neuropathological findings in 42 newborn lambs from a pure Churra breed flock, with clinical signs of weakness, inability to walk, difficulty in sucking and muscular rigidity observed immediately after birth. All the lambs showed near-total agyria with only a rudimentary formation of few sulci and gyri, and a severe cerebellar hypoplasia. On coronal section, the cerebral grey matter was markedly thicker than that of age-matched unaffected lambs and the ventricular system was moderately dilated. Histologically, the normal layers of the cerebral cortex were disorganized and, using an immunohistochemical technique against neurofilaments, three layers were identified instead of the six present in normal brains. The hippocampus was also markedly disorganised and the number and size of lobules were reduced in the cerebellum. Heterotopic neurons were present in different areas of the white matter. The remainder of the brain structures appeared normal. The pathological features reported are consistent with the type LCH-b (lissencephaly with cerebellar hypoplasia group b) defined in human medicine. No involvement of pestivirus or bluetongue virus was detected by immunohistochemistry. An analysis of pedigree data was consistent with a monogenic autosomal recessive pattern inheritance.ConclusionsThe study describes the clinical and pathological findings of lissencephaly with cerebellar hypoplasia in Churra lambs for which an autosomal recessive inheritance was the most likely cause. Histopathological features observed in the cerebral cortex and hippocampus are consistent with a possible failure in neuronal migration during brain development. This report suggests that lissencephaly should be considered in the differential diagnosis of congenital neurological disease in newborn lambs showing weakness, inability to walk and difficulty sucking.

Highlights

  • Is a rare developmental brain disorder in veterinary and human medicine associated with defects in neuronal migration leading to a characteristic marked reduction or absence of the convolutional pattern of the cerebral hemispheres

  • Neuronal migration disorders represent a group of rare brain malformations which account for a wide range of cortical anomalies, the most severe forms being represented by lissencephalies [1,2,3]

  • Lissencephaly has been reported to occur in association with ovine pestivirus [26] and Cache valley virus [21] infections, the lesions were not described in detail and the lack of gyral formation may have been associated with underlying cortical lesions such as porencephaly

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Summary

Introduction

Is a rare developmental brain disorder in veterinary and human medicine associated with defects in neuronal migration leading to a characteristic marked reduction or absence of the convolutional pattern of the cerebral hemispheres. Neuronal migration disorders represent a group of rare brain malformations which account for a wide range of cortical anomalies, the most severe forms being represented by lissencephalies [1,2,3]. Or agyriapachygyria designates a malformation characterized by a (few and broadened gyri) together with a very thick cortical gray matter layer, normal brainstem and grossly normal cerebellum or mild vermis hypoplasia, and ii) cobblestone or type II lissencephaly, in which affected children have an agyric brain, with a verrucous appearance and a less marked thickening of the cortex than in type I lissencephaly [1,6,7]. Among LCH, six different phenotypes have been described in children, according to the degree and characteristics of cerebellar hypoplasia and the presence of alterations in other areas such as the corpus callosum and the hippocampus [11]

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