| Literature DB >> 24479948 |
Laura M McDonell, Jodi Warman Chardon, Jeremy Schwartzentruber, Denise Foster, Chandree L Beaulieu, Jacek Majewski, Dennis E Bulman, Kym M Boycott1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite remarkable advances in genetic testing, many adults with syndromic epilepsy remain without a molecular diagnosis. The challenge in providing genetic testing for this patient population lies in the extensive genetic heterogeneity associated with epilepsy. Even for the subset of epilepsy patients that present with a defining feature, such as microcephaly, the number of possible genes that would require interrogation by Sanger sequencing is extensive and often prohibitively expensive. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24479948 PMCID: PMC3916514 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2377-14-22
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Figure 1WES identifies a novel frameshift mutation in . (A) Family pedigree showing the four affected siblings (solid symbols) and unaffected family members (open symbols). Squares represent males, circles females, asterisk denote available DNA. Patient II-1 was selected for WES (black arrow). (B) WES in Patient II-1 revealed a homozygous single-base pair insertion (c.1821dupT) in WDR62 producing a frameshift mutation (p.Arg608Serfs*26). (C) The mutation was validated by Sanger sequencing in all affected siblings (only II-1 and II-2 are shown); parental DNA was unavailable for this study. The mutation is absent in an unaffected control (WT). (D) Reported WDR62 mutations in MCPH2 families. WDR62 is located on chromosome 19q13.12 and contains 32 exons (NM_001083961.1) encoding 1523 amino acids. For clarity, reported WDR62 mutations are annotated as peptide changes (grey). Number sign indicates the compound heterozygous mutation present in one reported family [15]. The homozygous single-base pair insertion identified in the French-Canadian family is also shown (red).
Clinical and neuroimaging features of the four MCPH2 patients
| Gender | F | M | M | F |
| Age at assessment (yrs) | 59 | 56 | 55 | 53 |
| Height (cm) | 158 | 154 | 166 | 154 |
| Height percentile | 10-25th | <5th | 5th | 5-10th |
| Occipito-frontal circumference (cm) | 48.5 | 52 | 51 | 48 |
| Occipito-frontal circumference (SD) | -4 to -5 SD | -2 to -3 SD | -3 SD | -4 to -5 SD |
| Sloping forehead | + | + | + | + |
| Intellectual disability | Moderate-severe | Severe | Severe | Moderate-severe |
| Behaviour | Pleasant | Self injurious behaviour | Self injurious behaviour | Pleasant |
| Tone | Normal | Hypertonia | Hypertonia | Normal |
| Sensory exam | Normal | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| Reflexes | Normal | Hyperreflexia/ankle clonus | Hyperreflexia/ankle clonus | Normal |
| Bladder/bowel incontinence | +/- | +/+ | +/+ | +/- |
| Microcephaly | + | Nd | Nd | + |
| Polymicrogyria | - | Nd | Nd | - |
| Cerebellar hypoplasia | - | Nd | Nd | - |
| Cortical thickenng | - | Nd | Nd | - |
| Corpus callosum hypoplasia | - | Nd | Nd | - |
Abbreviations: F female, M male, nd not determined.
Figure 2Exome sequencing workflow. Exome sequencing was performed on isolated DNA from Patient II-1. The data was filtered to identify non-synonymous sequence variants including frameshift and non-frameshift indels, single nucleotide variants (SNV) including stop-gain and missense SNVs, and splicing and splicing-extending variants. Variants with a frequency of less than 1% in the 1000 genomes pilot release (Nov 2010) and in 100 in-house controls were then identified. The first method of analysis focused on rare homozygous variants (Method 1) and a second, simpler approach, focused only on rare variants in disease genes known to cause microcephaly/epilepsy (Method 2). Both methods identified the homozygous mutation in WDR62 as the cause of the neurodevelopmental disorder in this family.