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Somatic mutation involving diverse genes leads to a spectrum of focal cortical malformations

Authors :
Dulcie Lai
Meethila Gade
Edward Yang
Hyun Yong Koh
Nicole M. Walley
Anne F. Buckley
Tristan T. Sands
Cigdem I. Akman
Mohamad A. Mikati
Guy M. McKhann
James E. Goldman
Peter D. Canoll
Allyson L. Alexander
Kristen L. Park
Gretchen K. Von Allmen
Meenakshi B. Bhattacharjee
Hart G.W. Lidov
Hannes Vogel
Gerald A. Grant
Brenda E. Porter
Annapurna H. Poduri
Peter B. Crino
Erin L. Heinzen
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Post-zygotically acquired genetic variants, or somatic variants, that arise during cortical development have emerged as important causes of focal epilepsies, particularly those due to malformations of cortical development. Pathogenic somatic variants have been identified in many genes within the PI3K-AKT3-mTOR-signaling pathway in individuals with hemimegalencephaly and focal cortical dysplasia (type II), and more recently in SLC35A2 in individuals with focal cortical dysplasia (type I) or non-dysplastic epileptic cortex. Given the expanding role of somatic variants across different brain malformations, we sought to delineate the landscape of somatic variants in a large cohort of patients who underwent epilepsy surgery with hemimegalencephaly or focal cortical dysplasia. We evaluated samples from 123 children with hemimegalencephaly (n=16), focal cortical dysplasia type I and related phenotypes (n=48), focal cortical dysplasia type II (n=44), or focal cortical dysplasia type III (n=15) classified using imaging and pathological findings. We performed high-depth exome sequencing in brain tissue-derived DNA from each case and identified somatic single nucleotide, indel, and large copy number variants. In 75% of individuals with hemimegalencephaly and 29% with focal cortical dysplasia type II, we identified pathogenic variants in PI3K-AKT-mTOR pathway genes. Four of 48 cases with focal cortical dysplasia type I (8%) had a likely pathogenic variant in SLC35A2. While no other gene had multiple disease-causing somatic variants across the focal cortical dysplasia type I cohort, four individuals in this group had a single pathogenic or likely pathogenic somatic variant in CASK, KRAS, NF1, and NIPBL, genes associated with neurodevelopmental disorders. No rare pathogenic or likely pathogenic somatic variants in any neurological disease genes like those identified in the focal cortical dysplasia type I cohort were found in 63 neurologically normal controls (P = 0.017), suggesting a role for these novel variants. We also identified a somatic loss-of-function variant in the known epilepsy gene, PCDH19, present in a very small number of alleles in the dysplastic tissue from a female patient with focal cortical dysplasia IIIa with hippocampal sclerosis. In contrast to focal cortical dysplasia type II, neither focal cortical dysplasia type I nor III had somatic variants in genes that converge on a unifying biological pathway, suggesting greater genetic heterogeneity compared to type II. Importantly, we demonstrate that FCD types I, II, and III, are associated with somatic gene variants across a broad range of genes, many associated with epilepsy in clinical syndromes caused by germline variants, as well as including some not previously associated with radiographically evident cortical brain malformations.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........09d54f1a7b8a5e34586ff4179cebf388
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.12.22.21267563