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High Rate of Recurrent De Novo Mutations in Developmental and Epileptic Encephalopathies.

Authors :
Hamdan FF
Myers CT
Cossette P
Lemay P
Spiegelman D
Laporte AD
Nassif C
Diallo O
Monlong J
Cadieux-Dion M
Dobrzeniecka S
Meloche C
Retterer K
Cho MT
Rosenfeld JA
Bi W
Massicotte C
Miguet M
Brunga L
Regan BM
Mo K
Tam C
Schneider A
Hollingsworth G
FitzPatrick DR
Donaldson A
Canham N
Blair E
Kerr B
Fry AE
Thomas RH
Shelagh J
Hurst JA
Brittain H
Blyth M
Lebel RR
Gerkes EH
Davis-Keppen L
Stein Q
Chung WK
Dorison SJ
Benke PJ
Fassi E
Corsten-Janssen N
Kamsteeg EJ
Mau-Them FT
Bruel AL
Verloes A
Õunap K
Wojcik MH
Albert DVF
Venkateswaran S
Ware T
Jones D
Liu YC
Mohammad SS
Bizargity P
Bacino CA
Leuzzi V
Martinelli S
Dallapiccola B
Tartaglia M
Blumkin L
Wierenga KJ
Purcarin G
O'Byrne JJ
Stockler S
Lehman A
Keren B
Nougues MC
Mignot C
Auvin S
Nava C
Hiatt SM
Bebin M
Shao Y
Scaglia F
Lalani SR
Frye RE
Jarjour IT
Jacques S
Boucher RM
Riou E
Srour M
Carmant L
Lortie A
Major P
Diadori P
Dubeau F
D'Anjou G
Bourque G
Berkovic SF
Sadleir LG
Campeau PM
Kibar Z
Lafrenière RG
Girard SL
Mercimek-Mahmutoglu S
Boelman C
Rouleau GA
Scheffer IE
Mefford HC
Andrade DM
Rossignol E
Minassian BA
Michaud JL
Source :
American journal of human genetics [Am J Hum Genet] 2017 Nov 02; Vol. 101 (5), pp. 664-685.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE) is a group of conditions characterized by the co-occurrence of epilepsy and intellectual disability (ID), typically with developmental plateauing or regression associated with frequent epileptiform activity. The cause of DEE remains unknown in the majority of cases. We performed whole-genome sequencing (WGS) in 197 individuals with unexplained DEE and pharmaco-resistant seizures and in their unaffected parents. We focused our attention on de novo mutations (DNMs) and identified candidate genes containing such variants. We sought to identify additional subjects with DNMs in these genes by performing targeted sequencing in another series of individuals with DEE and by mining various sequencing datasets. We also performed meta-analyses to document enrichment of DNMs in candidate genes by leveraging our WGS dataset with those of several DEE and ID series. By combining these strategies, we were able to provide a causal link between DEE and the following genes: NTRK2, GABRB2, CLTC, DHDDS, NUS1, RAB11A, GABBR2, and SNAP25. Overall, we established a molecular diagnosis in 63/197 (32%) individuals in our WGS series. The main cause of DEE in these individuals was de novo point mutations (53/63 solved cases), followed by inherited mutations (6/63 solved cases) and de novo CNVs (4/63 solved cases). De novo missense variants explained a larger proportion of individuals in our series than in other series that were primarily ascertained because of ID. Moreover, these DNMs were more frequently recurrent than those identified in ID series. These observations indicate that the genetic landscape of DEE might be different from that of ID without epilepsy.<br /> (Copyright © 2017 American Society of Human Genetics. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1537-6605
Volume :
101
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
American journal of human genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29100083
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.09.008