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Detection of brain somatic variation in epilepsy-associated developmental lesions

Authors :
Tracy A. Bedrosian
Katherine E. Miller
Olivia E. Grischow
Hyojung Yoon
Kathleen M. Schieffer
Stephanie LaHaye
Anthony R. Miller
Jason Navarro
Jesse Westfall
Kristen Leraas
Samantha Choi
Rachel Williamson
James Fitch
Kristy Lee
Sean McGrath
Catherine E. Cottrell
Vincent Magrini
Jeffrey Leonard
Jonathan Pindrik
Ammar Shaikhouni
Daniel R. Boué
Diana L. Thomas
Christopher R. Pierson
Richard K. Wilson
Adam P. Ostendorf
Elaine R. Mardis
Daniel C. Koboldt
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Epilepsy-associated developmental lesions, including malformations of cortical development and low-grade developmental tumors, represent a major cause of drug-resistant seizures requiring surgical intervention in children. Brain-restricted somatic mosaicism has been implicated in the genetic etiology of these lesions; however, many contributory genes remain unidentified. We enrolled 50 children undergoing epilepsy surgery into a translational research study. We performed exome and RNA-sequencing of resected brain tissue samples to identify somatic variation. We uncovered candidate disease-causing somatic variation affecting 28 patients (56%), as well as candidate germline variants affecting 4 patients (8%). We confirmed somatic findings using high-depth targeted DNA sequencing. In agreement with previous studies, we identified somatic variation affecting SLC35A2 and MTOR pathway genes in patients with focal cortical dysplasia. Somatic gains of chromosome 1q were detected in 30% (3 of 10) Type I FCD patients. Somatic variation of MAPK pathway genes (i.e., FGFR1, FGFR2, BRAF, KRAS) was associated with low-grade epilepsy-associated developmental tumors. Somatic structural variation accounted for over one-half of epilepsy-associated tumor diagnoses. Sampling across multiple anatomic regions revealed that somatic variant allele fractions vary widely within epileptogenic tissue. Finally, we identified putative disease-causing variants in genes (EEF2, NAV2, PTPN11) not yet associated with focal cortical dysplasia. These results further elucidate the genetic basis of structural brain abnormalities leading to focal epilepsy in children and point to new candidate disease genes.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........8d18477a733a18825895fd627cf1f1d3
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.12.06.21267079