Back to Search Start Over

Targeted next generation sequencing as a diagnostic tool in epileptic disorders

Authors :
Lemke, Johannes R
Riesch, Erik
Scheurenbrand, Tim
Schubach, Max
Wilhelm, Christian
Steiner, Isabelle
Hansen, Jörg
Courage, Carolina
Gallati, Sabina
Bürki, Sarah
Strozzi, Susi
Simonetti, Barbara Goeggel
Grunt, Sebastian
Steinlin, Maja
Alber, Michael
Wolff, Markus
Klopstock, Thomas
Prott, Eva C
Lorenz, Rüdiger
Spaich, Christiane
Rona, Sabine
Lakshminarasimhan, Maya
Kröll, Judith
Dorn, Thomas
Krämer, Günter
Synofzik, Matthis
Becker, Felicitas
Weber, Yvonne G
Lerche, Holger
Böhm, Detlef
et al
University of Zurich
Lemke, Johannes R
Source :
Epilepsia 53(8), 1387-1398 (2012). doi:10.1111/j.1528-1167.2012.03516.x
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Epilepsies have a highly heterogeneous background with a strong genetic contribution. The variety of unspecific and overlapping syndromic and nonsyndromic phenotypes often hampers a clear clinical diagnosis and prevents straightforward genetic testing. Knowing the genetic basis of a patient's epilepsy can be valuable not only for diagnosis but also for guiding treatment and estimating recurrence risks.To overcome these diagnostic restrictions, we composed a panel of genes for Next Generation Sequencing containing the most relevant epilepsy genes and covering the most relevant epilepsy phenotypes known so far. With this method, 265 genes were analyzed per patient in a single step. We evaluated this panel on a pilot cohort of 33 index patients with concise epilepsy phenotypes or with a severe but unspecific seizure disorder covering both sporadic and familial cases.We identified presumed disease-causing mutations in 16 of 33 patients comprising sequence alterations in frequently as well as in less commonly affected genes. The detected aberrations encompassed known and unknown point mutations (SCN1A p.R222X, p. E289V, p.379R, p.R393H; SCN2A p.V208E; STXBP1 p.R122X; KCNJ10 p.L68P, p.I129V; KCTD7 p.L108M; KCNQ3 p.P574S; ARHGEF9 p.R290H; SMS p.F58L; TPP1 p.Q278R, p.Q422H; MFSD8 p.T294K), a putative splice site mutation (SCN1A c.693A> p.T/P231P) and small deletions (SCN1A p.F1330Lfs3X [1 bp]; MFSD8 p.A138Dfs10X [7 bp]). All mutations have been confirmed by conventional Sanger sequencing and, where possible, validated by parental testing and segregation analysis. In three patients with either Dravet syndrome or myoclonic epilepsy, we detected SCN1A mutations (p.R222X, p.P231P, p.R393H), even though other laboratories had previously excluded aberrations of this gene by Sanger sequencing or high-resolution melting analysis.We have developed a fast and cost-efficient diagnostic screening method to analyze the genetic basis of epilepsies. We were able to detect mutations in patients with clear and with unspecific epilepsy phenotypes, to uncover the genetic basis of many so far unresolved cases with epilepsy including mutation detection in cases in which previous conventional methods yielded falsely negative results. Our approach thus proved to be a powerful diagnostic tool that may contribute to collecting information on both common and unknown epileptic disorders and in delineating associated phenotypes of less frequently mutated genes.

Details

ISSN :
15281167
Volume :
53
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Epilepsia
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....1faf844b6aa33437ae575df32c6f5b3c