| Literature DB >> 31402629 |
Jaya Punetha1, Ender Karaca1,2, Alper Gezdirici3, Ryan E Lamont4, Davut Pehlivan1,5, Dana Marafi1, Juan P Appendino6, Jill V Hunter7, Zeynep C Akdemir1, Jawid M Fatih1, Shalini N Jhangiani8, Richard A Gibbs1,8, A Micheil Innes4,9, Jennifer E Posey1, James R Lupski1,8,10,11.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To characterize the molecular and clinical phenotypic basis of developmental and epileptic encephalopathies caused by rare biallelic variants in CACNA2D2.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31402629 PMCID: PMC6689679 DOI: 10.1002/acn3.50824
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Clin Transl Neurol ISSN: 2328-9503 Impact factor: 4.511
Figure 1Biallelic variant in CACNA2D2 in two siblings with developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (Family 1). (A) Pedigree diagram for Family 1 shows family structure and Sanger sequencing traces for the c.1778G>C, p.(Arg593Pro) CACNA2D2 variant in family members with available DNA. The variant is homozygous in both affected siblings (BH9685‐1 and BH9685‐4) and heterozygous in the unaffected mother (BH9685‐2) and unaffected sibling (BH9685‐5) conforming to Mendelian expectations for an autosomal recessive (AR) disease trait. DNA from the unaffected father was not available for segregation studies. (B) Absence of heterozygosity (AOH) plots for Family 1 show that the CACNA2D2 variant lies in a region of AOH in chromosome 3 that is represented by the gray shaded area for both affected siblings (BH9685‐1 and BH9685‐4). AOH regions are calculated using B‐allele frequency data from exome data.15 (C) T2‐weighted brain MRI images for affected siblings BH9685‐1 and BH9685‐4 show cerebellar atrophy.
Figure 2Biallelic variant in CACNA2D2 in proband with epileptic encephalopathy (Family 2). (A) Pedigree diagram and Sanger sequencing validation in Family 2 for CACNA2D2 variant c.485_486del, p.(Tyr162Ter) show heterozygosity for the variant in both parents, and homozygosity for the variant in the affected proband, consistent with an AR disease pattern. (B) T1‐weighted brain MRI images for affected proband show cerebral and cerebellar atrophy. (C) Routine EEG recording at 13 months of age captured an episode of unresponsiveness and eye‐blinking lasting for 8 seconds associated with 3 Hz generalized spike and slow wave activity consistent with early‐onset absence seizure [Settings: Low frequency filter at 1 Hz; high frequency filter at 70 Hz; sensitivity at 15 μV/mm; paperspeed 30 mm/sec].
Molecular features of individuals with rare biallelic CACNA2D2 variants.
| Family 1 | Family 2 | Edvardson et al | Pippucci et al | Valence et al | Butler et al | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ethnicity | Turkish | Afghani | Arab‐Palestinian | Italian | Portuguese | Unknown | |||
| Gender | M | F | M | M | M | F | M | M | M |
| Age at last evaluation | 29 years | 24 years | 5 years | 7 years | 4 years | – | 10 years | 20 years | 5 years |
| Parental consanguinity | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | unknown | No | |||
| Zygosity | Hom | Hom | Hom | Hom | Hom | Compound het | |||
| cDNA (NM_006030.3) | c.1778G>C | c.485_486delAT | c.3119A>G | c.1295delA | c.2971G>A | c.782C>T, c.3137T>C | |||
| Exon (of 38) | Exon 20 | Exon 5 | Exon 36 | Exon 13 | Exon 34 | Exon7, Exon 36 | |||
| Protein | p.(Arg593Pro) | p.(Tyr162Ter) | p.(Leu1040Pro) | p.(Asn432fs) | p.(Asp991Asn) | p.(Pro261Leu), p.(Leu1046Pro) | |||
| Variant information | Missense | Nonsense/potential LoF | Missense | Frameshift/potential LoF | Missense | Missense + missense | |||
| Testing | ES | ES | Epilepsy panel | ES | ES | ES | ES | ||
Abbreviations: ES, exome sequencing; F, female; het, heterozygous; hom, homozygous; LoF, loss of function; M, male.
Clinical features of individuals with rare biallelic CACNA2D2 variants.
| Family 1 | Family 2 | Edvardson et al | Pippucci et al | Valence et al | Butler et al. | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age at onset | 1 month | 2 months | 7 months | 1–2 months | 5 months | ‐ | 7 months |
| Seizure types | Tonic‐clonic | Tonic‐clonic | Tonic‐clonic, typical absence, myoclonic, focal sensory | Atonic, clonic, tonic‐clonic | Clonic, clonic‐tonic, typical absence | Single febrile seizure at 1 year of age | Typical absence, atonic, tonic, tonic‐clonic |
| Epilepsy | + | + | + | + | + | ‐ | + |
| DR | DR | DR | DR | DR | ‐ | Controlled | |
| AED treatment & response | LEV, OCBZ, TPM, CLN | Amantadine, ESM, VPA, CLB; VNS placement | VGB, CLN, TPM, CLB PB, VPA | PB, BZD, VPA, LEV, LTG, ESM (effective) | n/a | VPA, ESM, CLN (effective), ketogenic diet | |
| ID/GDD | ID, GDD | Severe GDD | Severe GDD | Severe GDD | ‐ | GDD | |
| Brain MRI findings | Mild supratentorial WM loss, thinning of CC, marked; diffuse CA (at ages 21 years, 26 years) | Normal WM, foreshortened CC, mild CA (at 1.1 years) | Normal WM, borderline lower to normal CC, mild‐moderate; diffuse CA (at 8 years) | Prominent ventral WM loss, thinning and slight foreshortening of CC, moderate‐marked; diffuse CA (at 7 years) | Mild WM loss, slight foreshortening of CC, moderate CA; localized to superior vermis (at 18 years) | Prominent ventral WM loss, normal CC, marked; diffuse CA (at 2.4 years) | |
| Ataxia | Truncal ataxia | Axial ataxia | ‐ | ‐ | Congenital ataxia | Moderate ataxia | |
| Other neurological features | Mild behavioral problems, wheelchair dependent, speech limited to a few words | Nonambulatory, absent speech, axial hypotonia, dysmetria | Intermittent choreiform movements, axial hypotonia, absent speech | Dyskinesia, tremors, myoclonic jerks, hypertonia, axial hypotonia, oculomotor apraxia, recurrent SE | Motor delay, dysmetria, dysarthria | Nonambulatory, absent speech, hypotonia, recurrent SE | |
Abbreviations: AED, antiepileptic drugs; BZD, benzodiazepine; CA, cerebellar atrophy; CC, corpus callosum; CLB, clobazam; CLN, clonazepam; DR, drug resistant; EEG, electroencephalogram; ESM, Ethosuximide; GDD, global developmental delay; GSSW, generalized spike and slow waves; ID, intellectual disability; LEV, levetiracetam; LTG, lamotrigine; OCBZ, oxcarbazepine; PB, phenobarbital; SE, status epilepticus; TPM, topiramate; VNS, vagal nerve stimulator; VGB, vigabatrin; VPA, valproic acid; WM, white matter.
Figure 3Exonic and protein map positions of CACNA2D2 variant alleles showing potential protein domains mutated. Lollipop diagram showing biallelic variants reported in this study (2 families) and reported previously in the literature (4 families) mapped across the transcript and protein domain structures of CACNA2D2. The orange lollipops indicate the positions of homozygous variants in CACNA2D2 from four families (Edvardson et al.8, orange, Pippucci et al.9, orange, Family 1, orange, and 2, orange, in this report) with developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE) and cerebellar atrophy. The blue lollipops show the positions of reported compound heterozygous variants inherited in trans in a patient with DEE and cerebellar atrophy (Butler et al.11, blue). The purple lollipop and red text indicate the position of a homozygous variant reported to cause a milder phenotype of congenital ataxia (CA) and cerebellar atrophy (Valence et al.10, purple). The genomic structure of CACNA2D2 represented here is based on information from the UCSC genome browser (https://genome.ucsc.edu) using transcript NM_006030; note the CACNA2D2 transcript is encoded by the minus strand and has been flipped here for representational purposes. The protein domain structures were visualized and variants mapped using the Mutation Mapper portal (http://www.cbioportal.org/mutation_mapper). Protein domains: VWA_N: VWA N‐terminal (141–265), VWA: von Willebrand factor type A domain (291–454), dCache_1: Cache domain (485–573), VGCC_alpha2: Neuronal voltage‐dependent calcium channel alpha 2acd (580–662).
Genes encoding voltage‐gated Calcium channels that are linked to epilepsy and/or ataxia phenotypes.
| Gene | Disease | Phenotype MIM# | Inheritance | Gene expression |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Epileptic encephalopathy, early infantile, 42 | 617106 | AD | Cerebellum, caudate, brain, other |
| Episodic ataxia, type 2 | 108500 | AD | ||
| Migraine, familial hemiplegic, 1 | 141500 | AD | ||
| Migraine, familial hemiplegic, 1, with progressive cerebellar ataxia | 141500 | AD | ||
| Spinocerebellar ataxia 6 | 183086 | AD | ||
|
| Spinocerebellar ataxia 42 | 616795 | AD | Cerebellum, caudate, brain, retina, ovary, uterine, other |
| Spinocerebellar ataxia 42, early‐onset, severe, with neurodevelopmental deficits | 618087 | AD | ||
|
| Episodic ataxia, type 5 | 613855 | AD | Cerebellum, caudate, brain, hippocampus, other |
| {Epilepsy, idiopathic generalized, susceptibility to, 9} | 607682 | AD | ||
| {Epilepsy, juvenile myoclonic, susceptibility to, 6} | 607682 | AD | ||
|
| Intellectual disability and epilepsy (Vergult et al., 2015) | – | AD | Skeletal muscle, hippocampus, brain, caudate, smooth muscle, thyroid, pituitary gland, other |
|
| Early‐onset epileptic encephalopathy (Edvardson et al. | – | AR | Lung, cerebellum, retina, caudate, other |
| Congenital ataxia (Valence et al | – | AR |
Abbreviations: AD, Autosomal dominant; AR, Autosomal recessive. Note that gene expression in major tissues (>5% total expression in all tissues) from humans was incorporated from Seitter et al.28 and the GTEx database.
Figure 4Gene expression in brain tissues of genes encoding voltage‐gated calcium channels linked to epilepsy and/or ataxia. Gene expression pattern in all brain tissues from GTEx portal for the genes encoding voltage‐gated calcium channels CACNA1A, CACNA1G, CACNB4, CACNA2D1, and CACNA2D2. The orange box highlights expression in the specific brain regions of cerebellar hemisphere and cerebellum. TPM: Transcripts Per Million, Data Source: GTEx Analysis Release V7 (dbGaP Accession phs000424.v7.p2), accessed on 30th March, 2019.