| Literature DB >> 29121005 |
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Abstract
PurposeAs part of the Epilepsy Genetics Initiative, we re-evaluated clinically generated exome sequence data from 54 epilepsy patients and their unaffected parents to identify molecular diagnoses not provided in the initial diagnostic interpretation.MethodsWe compiled and analyzed exome sequence data from 54 genetically undiagnosed trios using a validated analysis pipeline. We evaluated the significance of the genetic findings by reanalyzing sequence data generated at Ambry Genetics, and from a number of additional case and control cohorts.ResultsIn 54 previously undiagnosed trios, we identified two de novo missense variants in SCN8A in the highly expressed alternative exon 5 A-an exon only recently added to the Consensus Coding Sequence database. One additional undiagnosed epilepsy patient harboring a de novo variant in exon 5 A was found in the Ambry Genetics cohort. Missense variants in SCN8A exon 5 A are extremely rare in the population, further supporting the pathogenicity of the de novo alterations identified.ConclusionThese results expand the range of SCN8A variants in epileptic encephalopathy patients and illustrate the necessity of ongoing reanalysis of negative exome sequences, as advances in the knowledge of disease genes and their annotations will permit new diagnoses to be made.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29121005 PMCID: PMC5823708 DOI: 10.1038/gim.2017.100
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genet Med ISSN: 1098-3600 Impact factor: 8.822
Figure 1Exon 5 of . (a) Exon 5 is encoded by two sequences in the genome (exons 5 N and 5 A). Only one of the two exons remains in the transcripts after splicing occurs. The nucleotide (b) and amino acid sequences (c) of exons 5 N and 5 A are nearly identical. Asterisks indicate the sites with the same sequence and arrows highlight the sites where a novel disease-causing SCN8A variant was identified in exon 5 A in this study. All disease-causing variants were found at sites where the sequence was identical between exons 5 A and 5 N. (d) Exon 5, highlighted in red, spans two transmembrane domains and a small extracellular region of Nav1.6. The three disease-causing variants, marked in green, were all located in the regions encoding transmembrane-spanning portions of the protein. (Adapted from ref. 4.)
The Epilepsy Genetics Initiative (EGI) participant phenotype and summary of cases previously described in the literature
| Variant | — | c.667A>G (p.Arg223Gly) | c.632T>C (p.Val211Ala) | c.692T>C (p.Ile231Thr) |
| Inheritance | — | De novo | De novo | De novo |
| Sex | — | Female | Male | Male |
| Ethnicity | — | Paternal–European Maternal–Chinese | Paternal–European Maternal–Filipino | Paternal–European Maternal–European |
| Age at seizure onset | 4–5 months on average | 6 months | 3 months | Febrile seizures at ~7–8 months; first unprovoked seizure at ~1 year of age |
| Seizure type(s) | Focal, tonic, clonic, myoclonic, and absence seizures reported; epileptic spasms; typically not associated with fever; convulsive or nonconvulsive status epilepticus in some | Clusters of head drops that evolved into extensor spasms | Tonic–clonic, then asymmetric supplementary motor seizures (left > right); tonic; focal dyscognitive | Febrile generalized tonic–clonic seizures, focal seizures, absence seizures |
| Development | Intellectual disability is common and may range from mild to severe; no speech for some; wheelchair dependence for some | Global developmental delay | Global developmental delay; never developed language | Global developmental delay; learning difficulty |
| Regression | In most cases, development is normal from birth to seizure onset; regression often slows or regresses following seizure onset | No | Yes; used to walk but regressed in setting of prolonged seizures | No |
| Electroencephalogram | Moderate to severe background slowing with focal or multifocal epileptiform discharges | Hypsarrhythmia with electroclinical spasms with electrodecrement | Left focal spikes, generalized spike/wave, background slowing and disorganization | Multifocal epileptiform discharges with background slowing |
| Magnetic resonance imaging | Variable degrees of generalized atrophy | Diffuse atrophy | Mild white matter volume loss; increased FLAIR hyperintensity in the left hemisphere in the acute setting of seizures | Normal |
| Other | Hypotonia, dystonia, ataxia, hyperreflexia, choreoathetosis | — | — | Hypotonia, ataxia |
| Diagnosis before exome sequencing | — | West syndrome of unknown cause | Epileptic encephalopathy of unknown cause | Epileptic encephalopathy of unknown cause |
| Response to treatment | Seizures refractory for many patients | Refractory to all anti- AEDs | Refractory to many AEDs; felbamate withdrawal precipitated convulsive status; addition of cannabidiol was reported to be helpful; once | Responder to levetiracetam and topiramate; good seizure control since ~3 years of age; still has staring spells |
AED, antiepileptic drug; EE, epileptic encephalopathy; FLAIR, fluid-attenuated inversion recovery.