| Literature DB >> 24939913 |
Eva M Reinthaler1, Dennis Lal2, Sebastien Lebon3, Michael S Hildebrand4, Hans-Henrik M Dahl4, Brigid M Regan4, Martha Feucht5, Hannelore Steinböck6, Birgit Neophytou7, Gabriel M Ronen8, Laurian Roche8, Ursula Gruber-Sedlmayr9, Julia Geldner10, Edda Haberlandt11, Per Hoffmann12, Stefan Herms12, Christian Gieger13, Melanie Waldenberger14, Andre Franke15, Michael Wittig15, Susanne Schoch16, Albert J Becker16, Andreas Hahn17, Katrin Männik18, Mohammad R Toliat19, Georg Winterer20, Holger Lerche21, Peter Nürnberg22, Heather Mefford23, Ingrid E Scheffer24, Samuel F Berkovic4, Jacques S Beckmann25, Thomas Sander19, Sebastien Jacquemont26, Alexandre Reymond27, Fritz Zimprich28, Bernd A Neubauer17.
Abstract
Rolandic epilepsy (RE) is the most common idiopathic focal childhood epilepsy. Its molecular basis is largely unknown and a complex genetic etiology is assumed in the majority of affected individuals. The present study tested whether six large recurrent copy number variants at 1q21, 15q11.2, 15q13.3, 16p11.2, 16p13.11 and 22q11.2 previously associated with neurodevelopmental disorders also increase risk of RE. Our association analyses revealed a significant excess of the 600 kb genomic duplication at the 16p11.2 locus (chr16: 29.5-30.1 Mb) in 393 unrelated patients with typical (n = 339) and atypical (ARE; n = 54) RE compared with the prevalence in 65,046 European population controls (5/393 cases versus 32/65,046 controls; Fisher's exact test P = 2.83 × 10(-6), odds ratio = 26.2, 95% confidence interval: 7.9-68.2). In contrast, the 16p11.2 duplication was not detected in 1738 European epilepsy patients with either temporal lobe epilepsy (n = 330) and genetic generalized epilepsies (n = 1408), suggesting a selective enrichment of the 16p11.2 duplication in idiopathic focal childhood epilepsies (Fisher's exact test P = 2.1 × 10(-4)). In a subsequent screen among children carrying the 16p11.2 600 kb rearrangement we identified three patients with RE-spectrum epilepsies in 117 duplication carriers (2.6%) but none in 202 carriers of the reciprocal deletion. Our results suggest that the 16p11.2 duplication represents a significant genetic risk factor for typical and atypical RE.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24939913 DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddu306
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mol Genet ISSN: 0964-6906 Impact factor: 6.150