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Comprehensive analysis of coding variants highlights genetic complexity in developmental and epileptic encephalopathy

Authors :
Satomi Mitsuhashi
Kohei Hamanaka
Rie Miyata
Kazuki Tsukamoto
Tokito Yamaguchi
Satoko Miyatake
Taikan Oboshi
Toshiyuki Itai
Gaku Minase
Tomokazu Kimizu
Masayuki Shimono
Eriko Koshimizu
Takashi Shiihara
Kazuyuki Nakamura
Yasunari Sakai
Jun Tohyama
Masano Amamoto
Shinsaku Yoshitomi
Kazuhiro Iwama
Masayasu Ohta
Futoshi Sekiguchi
Rina Takahashi
Hirotomo Saitsu
Tohru Okanishi
Noriko Miyake
Shin Nabatame
Atsushi Takata
Masaya Kubota
Yohane Miyata
Rumiko Takayama
Naomi Tsuchida
Tomohiro Sakaguchi
Kouhei Den
Mizue Iai
Takeshi Mizuguchi
Tomohide Goto
Yukitoshi Takahashi
Shinichi Hirabayashi
Ken Saida
Yuri Uchiyama
Eri Imagawa
Hiroshi Matsumoto
Hirofumi Kashii
Katsumi Imai
Nobuhiko Okamoto
Kaori Aiba
Hitoshi Osaka
Mitsuhiro Kato
Hiromi Aoi
Saoko Takeshita
Yu Kobayashi
Ryutaro Kira
Naomichi Matsumoto
Ichiro Kuki
Mitsuko Nakashima
Munetsugu Hara
Kazuhiro Haginoya
Chihiro Ohba
Jun Matsui
Jun-ichi Takanashi
Atsushi Fujita
Kenji Yokochi
Masayuki Sasaki
Shimpei Baba
Hiroko Ikeda
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-14 (2019), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2019.

Abstract

Although there are many known Mendelian genes linked to epileptic or developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (EE/DEE), its genetic architecture is not fully explained. Here, we address this incompleteness by analyzing exomes of 743 EE/DEE cases and 2366 controls. We observe that damaging ultra-rare variants (dURVs) unique to an individual are significantly overrepresented in EE/DEE, both in known EE/DEE genes and the other non-EE/DEE genes. Importantly, enrichment of dURVs in non-EE/DEE genes is significant, even in the subset of cases with diagnostic dURVs (P = 0.000215), suggesting oligogenic contribution of non-EE/DEE gene dURVs. Gene-based analysis identifies exome-wide significant (P = 2.04 × 10−6) enrichment of damaging de novo mutations in NF1, a gene primarily linked to neurofibromatosis, in infantile spasm. Together with accumulating evidence for roles of oligogenic or modifier variants in severe neurodevelopmental disorders, our results highlight genetic complexity in EE/DEE, and indicate that EE/DEE is not an aggregate of simple Mendelian disorders.<br />Many causative genes are known for epileptic or developmental and epileptic encephalopathies (EE/DEE) yet a genetic diagnosis cannot be made for many patients. Here, the authors analyse whole exome sequencing data from a Japanese case−control cohort to identify common, rare and ultra-rare coding variants associated with EE/DEE.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b583ee6b60c079588be46adcfa8fed34