Literature DB >> 33298907

Hemizygous FLNA variant in West syndrome without periventricular nodular heterotopia.

Yoshitaka Hiromoto1, Yoshiteru Azuma1, Yuichi Suzuki2, Megumi Hoshina3, Yuri Uchiyama1,4, Satomi Mitsuhashi1, Satoko Miyatake1, Takeshi Mizuguchi1, Atsushi Takata1, Noriko Miyake1, Mitsuhiro Kato5, Naomichi Matsumoto6.   

Abstract

Pathogenic FLNA variants can be identified in patients with seizures accompanied by periventricular nodular heterotopia (PVNH). It is unusual to find FLNA aberrations in epileptic patients without PVNH on brain imaging. We report a boy with cryptogenic West syndrome followed by refractory seizures and psychomotor delay. We performed whole-exome sequencing and identified a de novo missense variant in FLNA. It is noteworthy that this patient showed no PVNH. As no other pathogenic variants were found in epilepsy-related genes, this FLNA variant likely caused West syndrome but with no PVNH.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 33298907      PMCID: PMC7713383          DOI: 10.1038/s41439-020-00131-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hum Genome Var        ISSN: 2054-345X


In epileptic encephalopathy, epileptic activity contributes to severe cognitive and behavioral impairments[1]. Genetic causes can be detected in patients with epileptic encephalopathy, including age-dependent epilepsy in infancy such as West syndrome[2]. The FLNA gene at Xq28 encodes the filamin A protein, which is known to interact with more than 90 other proteins that could involve neuronal migration and other functions[3-5]. Pathogenic FLNA variants are known to cause several human phenotypes[6]. Loss-of-function variants in FLNA cause periventricular nodular heterotopia (PVNH1) (MIM #300017) or/and congenital intestinal pseudo-obstruction. Gain-of-function mutations in FLNA cause otopalatodigital spectrum disorders. Cardiac valvular dystrophy is observed in patients with both loss-of-function and gain-of-function variants, suggesting a different mechanism involved in valvular dystrophy. FLNA pathogenic variants could also cause thrombocytopenia through aberrant activation of GPIbα and αIIbβ3 integrin, which are receptors of FLNa and essential to platelet adhesion and aggregation[4]. Seizure is a common symptom in PVNH patients (more than 70%)[7]. Based on the X-linked dominant inheritance pattern of FLNA aberration, FLNA-related PVNH patients are usually females (more than 90%)[7], and FLNA variants in males might be lethal in association with high miscarriage rates in mothers affected with PVNH1 as well as high infantile mortality in affected boys[8,9]. The reason for such high mortality remains unclear, but early deaths in males could arise from hemorrhage[3] or cardiovascular malformation[10] but not from brain malformation. However, approximately 30 male patients whose FLNA variants are predicted to be partially loss-of-function or mosaic have been reported to date[11]. The Flna-null mouse model showed that they died at midgestation with widespread hemorrhage from abnormal vessels and truncus arteriosus[12]. Here, we report a boy with West syndrome arising from a de novo FLNA variant detected by whole-exome sequencing (WES), but no PVNH was seen by brain MRI. All human studies were approved by the institutional review boards of Yokohama City University, Showa University and Fukushima Medical University. Written informed consent was obtained from the parents of the patient. WES was performed on the patient’s DNA. Genomic DNA was captured by the SureSelect Human All Exon v6 system (Agilent Technologies, Santa Clara, CA, USA) and sequenced on the HiSeq 2500 platform (Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA) as described previously[13]. The mean WES coverage was 71.07x, and at least 89.8% coverage of the target regions with 20 or more reads was achieved. To identify causative variants of infantile spasms, we narrowed down variants in our patient based on the allele frequency (<0.001 for autosomal dominant model, <0.01 for autosomal recessive model, and <0.01 for X-linked model) using the Human Genetic Variation Database (HGVD) (http://www.hgvd.genome.med.kyoto-u.ac.jp/), the Exome Aggregation Consortium (ExAC) (http://exac.broadinstitute.org/), the Tohoku Medical Megabank Organization (ToMMo) (https://www.megabank.tohoku.ac.jp/english/) and the Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD) (https://gnomad.broadinstitute.org/). We also used our in-house whole-exome database of 575 Japanese control individuals and excluded nonpathogenic variants by their allele frequency. After selecting the variants in the database according to frequency, we determined whether the remaining variants were deleterious using three prediction tools recommended in the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG) Standards and Guidelines: SIFT (https://sift.bii.a-star.edu.sg/), Polyphen-2 (http://genetics.bwh.harvard.edu/pph2/) and CADD (https://cadd.gs.washington.edu/). Copy number variations (CNVs) were also detected from the WES data using the eXome-Hidden Markov Model as previously described[14]. To determine whether the deleterious variant detected by WES was a de novo variant, we sequenced the DNA of the parents and patient using the Sanger method. For polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis, we used Takara Ex Taq HS polymerase (Takara Bio, Shiga, Japan) and two primers (forward 5′-CTT TTG GGC CAT AGC AGT TAA GA-3′; reverse 5′-CAG TGC ACT TGC TGG CGT CC-3′) with the following PCR conditions: denaturation at 94 °C for 30 s; annealing at 68 °C for 30 s; and extension at 72 °C for 30 s for 35 cycles. The paternal and maternal DNA were examined by fragment analysis in twelve different regions that included STRs as previously described[15]. A 3-year-old boy was born to nonconsanguineous parents with no family history of seizures or other neurological disorders. His full-term birth height and weight were 49.5 cm and 3.225 g, respectively, which are within ±2.0 SD. The patient had an uneventful perinatal period. He had transient bilateral dystonic posture in the upper limbs at the age of 5 months. At 9 months, he developed infantile spasms. Hypsarrhythmia and spasms were observed on electroencephalography (EEG) (Fig. 1a, b). Thoracoabdominal X-ray photograph, echocardiogram, fundus examination and biochemical examination showed no abnormalities. Administration of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) improved the abnormal waveforms on interictal EEG (Fig. 1c) but could not control spasms. After ACTH therapy, vitamin B6, zonisamide, valproic acid, clonazepam, topiramate, vigabatrin, and lamotrigine were administered but were not effective against his spasms. Furthermore, a corpus callosotomy at the age of 21 months had no effect on his spasms. PVNH was not observed on brain MRI either before or after corpus callosotomy (Fig. 1d–k). The patient had a developmental delay (DQ = 28) and could not speak any meaningful words. He also exhibited autistic behavior. Skeletal abnormalities were not observed.
Fig. 1

Clinical information of the patient and structure of filamin A protein.

a Electroencephalography (EEG) results of the patient showing hypsarrhythmia during wakefulness at 9 months of age. b Ictal EEG results showing cluster spasms with head drop at 9 months of age. c EEG results at 11 months of age and after adrenocorticotropic hormone therapy. Sporadic slow waves were observed in the bitemporal regions. d, e Brain MRI T1-weighted and f, g T2-weighted images of the patient at the age of 15 months. Three pediatric neurologists independently confirmed the absence of periventricular nodular heterotopia. h, i Brain MRI T1-weighted and j, k T2-weighted images of the patient at the age of 29 months. l Filamin A protein with functional domains and FLNA variants found in males. Functional domains consist of the actin-binding domain containing two calponin homology (CH) domains and 24 Ig domains. Pathogenic variants detected in males are shown as triangles below Filamin A. FLNA variants in PVNH1 or in epilepsy without PVNH are shown as black or red triangles. Filled or open triangles indicate nonsense or missense/in-flame changes.

Clinical information of the patient and structure of filamin A protein.

a Electroencephalography (EEG) results of the patient showing hypsarrhythmia during wakefulness at 9 months of age. b Ictal EEG results showing cluster spasms with head drop at 9 months of age. c EEG results at 11 months of age and after adrenocorticotropic hormone therapy. Sporadic slow waves were observed in the bitemporal regions. d, e Brain MRI T1-weighted and f, g T2-weighted images of the patient at the age of 15 months. Three pediatric neurologists independently confirmed the absence of periventricular nodular heterotopia. h, i Brain MRI T1-weighted and j, k T2-weighted images of the patient at the age of 29 months. l Filamin A protein with functional domains and FLNA variants found in males. Functional domains consist of the actin-binding domain containing two calponin homology (CH) domains and 24 Ig domains. Pathogenic variants detected in males are shown as triangles below Filamin A. FLNA variants in PVNH1 or in epilepsy without PVNH are shown as black or red triangles. Filled or open triangles indicate nonsense or missense/in-flame changes. WES showed a rare hemizygous missense variant in FLNA (NM_001456.4: c.4804G>A: p.Gly1602Ser) (Fig. S1a, b). Sanger sequencing of the patient’s parents confirmed that the variant was de novo. Additionally, short tandem repeat analysis indicated that they were his biological parents. This variant was not registered in the in-house database, HGVD, ExAC, ToMMo or gnomAD and was indicated as pathogenic based on the following in silico tools: SIFT: 0 (damaging), Polyphen-2: 0.996 (deleterious) and CADD: 27.0 (deleterious). No other rare variants in epilepsy-related genes registered in OMIM or deleterious CNVs were found in the patient. In addition, amino acid substitutions are highly evolutionarily conserved among different species (Fig. S1c). On the basis of the ACMG Standards and Guidelines[16], we concluded that this variant is likely pathogenic according to the following evidence of pathogenicity: strong: PS2, moderate: PM2, supporting: PP3. Among the clinical consequences of FLNA variants, PVNH1 is the most common brain abnormality[6]. However, we could not detect PVNH or other brain MRI abnormalities in this patient who developed infantile spasms. We found at least three cases of epilepsy arising from possibly pathogenic FLNA variants that provided no description of PVNH or other abnormal MRI findings (but with no images presented) in the literature[17-19] (Table 1). One reported male case had a p.Asp1527Asn variant within the Ig domain[18] and our case variant, p.Gly1602Ser, was also located within the neighboring Ig domain (Fig. 1l). Two independent male cases could support that FLNA variants can cause epileptic encephalopathy with no PVNH. Interestingly, seizures associated with PVNH1 patients (females and males) are typically adolescent-onset, and early infantile onset is uncommon[6,7,10,11,20]. Our patient started spasms at the age of 9 months, and other epileptic patients without PVNH had seizures before the age of 1 year (Table 1).
Table 1

Epileptic Individuals with no periventricular nodular heterotopia arising from FLNA variants.

Case 1Case 2aCase 3Our Case
Age at onset9 months5 monthsUnknown9 months
SexFemaleMaleFemaleMale
Mutationc.5324C>T p.Leu1775Pro de novoc.4579G>A p.Asp1527Asn maternal inheritedc.2662G>T p.Glu888* heterozygousc.4804G>A p.Gly1602Serb de novo hemizygous
PhenotypeLennox-Gastaut syndromeEpileptic encephalopathies, infantileEpilepsy (generalized or focal)Cryptogenic West syndrome
Allele frequency (number of homozygotes, hemizygotes) in gnomAD0 (0,0)8.83e−5 (0,2)0 (0,0)0 (0,0)
SIFT0.220.21-0
Polyphen20.9050.452-0.996
CADD22.923.44127.0
Brain imagingParietal venous angiomaNormalNot availableNormal
SourceAllen et al.[17]Wei et al.[18]DiFrancesco et al.[19]This report

aCase 2, from a paper written in Chinese, is a boy diagnosed with moderate infantile epileptic encephalopathy with an onset age of 5 months. Wei et al. created a customized kit covering all exonic regions associated with 4000 monogenic genetic diseases in the OMIM databases, performed NGS using the Illumina platform, and detected an FLNA heterozygous missense variant. They described that the FLNA variant is likely pathogenic in association with PVNH1, but no abnormality was seen in brain MRI.

bIn gnomAD, there is a missense variant (allele frequency: 1.11e−5 and number of hemizygotes: 1) that affects the same amino acid but leads to a different amino acid substitution (p.Gly1602Arg). In silico scores of that variant are SIFT: 0, Polyphen: 0.999 and CADD: 28.1.

Epileptic Individuals with no periventricular nodular heterotopia arising from FLNA variants. aCase 2, from a paper written in Chinese, is a boy diagnosed with moderate infantile epileptic encephalopathy with an onset age of 5 months. Wei et al. created a customized kit covering all exonic regions associated with 4000 monogenic genetic diseases in the OMIM databases, performed NGS using the Illumina platform, and detected an FLNA heterozygous missense variant. They described that the FLNA variant is likely pathogenic in association with PVNH1, but no abnormality was seen in brain MRI. bIn gnomAD, there is a missense variant (allele frequency: 1.11e−5 and number of hemizygotes: 1) that affects the same amino acid but leads to a different amino acid substitution (p.Gly1602Arg). In silico scores of that variant are SIFT: 0, Polyphen: 0.999 and CADD: 28.1. While PVNH1 patients often suffer from seizures, it is unclear whether heterotopia is a direct cause of these seizures. The extent of PVNH on brain MRI is not associated with the age of onset of seizures or overall clinical severity as previously described[7]. Flna transcripts are highly expressed across the entire cerebral cortex in the late period of mouse embryogenesis (E14.5–E16.5), while filamin B, a homolog of filamin A, is localized near the ventricular and subventricular zone[21]. Interestingly, in the late period of embryogenesis (E14.5) of Flna-null mice, no neuronal accumulation in the ventricular zone or heterotopic neurons was recognized[12]. Filamin A is known to interact with the HCN1 channel and modulate neuronal excitability in the mature brain via endocytosis of the HCN1 channel[22] encoded by HCN1. HCN1 is also expressed in the entire brain (especially in the cerebral cortex, hippocampus and cerebellum) of rats[23]. HCN1 variants cause early infantile epileptic encephalopathy (EIEE24, #615871). Considering these facts, FLNA abnormalities may cause subventricular zone abnormalities leading to PVNH1 and dysfunction of the entire cerebral cortex. We report a boy who suffered from West syndrome without PVNH1 arising from a de novo missense variant in FLNA. Considering the wide expression of filamin A protein in the mature brain, FLNA1 variants may be considered one of rare causes of epileptic encephalopathy without PVNH1. Figure S1
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Journal:  Clin Genet       Date:  2018-01-25       Impact factor: 4.438

3.  Periventricular heterotopia: an X-linked dominant epilepsy locus causing aberrant cerebral cortical development.

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Review 4.  HCN ion channels and accessory proteins in epilepsy: genetic analysis of a large cohort of patients and review of the literature.

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Journal:  Epilepsy Res       Date:  2019-04-08       Impact factor: 3.045

5.  GGC Repeat Expansion of NOTCH2NLC in Adult Patients with Leukoencephalopathy.

Authors:  Masaki Okubo; Hiroshi Doi; Ryoko Fukai; Atsushi Fujita; Satomi Mitsuhashi; Shunta Hashiguchi; Hitaru Kishida; Naohisa Ueda; Keisuke Morihara; Akihiro Ogasawara; Yuko Kawamoto; Tatsuya Takahashi; Keita Takahashi; Haruko Nakamura; Misako Kunii; Mikiko Tada; Atsuko Katsumoto; Hiromi Fukuda; Takeshi Mizuguchi; Satoko Miyatake; Noriko Miyake; Junichiro Suzuki; Yasuhiro Ito; Jun Sone; Gen Sobue; Hideyuki Takeuchi; Naomichi Matsumoto; Fumiaki Tanaka
Journal:  Ann Neurol       Date:  2019-10-22       Impact factor: 10.422

6.  Vascular and connective tissue anomalies associated with X-linked periventricular heterotopia due to mutations in Filamin A.

Authors:  Eyal Reinstein; Sophia Frentz; Tim Morgan; Sixto García-Miñaúr; Richard J Leventer; George McGillivray; Mitchel Pariani; Anthony van der Steen; Michael Pope; Muriel Holder-Espinasse; Richard Scott; Elizabeth M Thompson; Terry Robertson; Brian Coppin; Robert Siegel; Montserrat Bret Zurita; Jose I Rodríguez; Carmen Morales; Yuri Rodrigues; Joaquín Arcas; Anand Saggar; Margaret Horton; Elaine Zackai; John M Graham; David L Rimoin; Stephen P Robertson
Journal:  Eur J Hum Genet       Date:  2012-10-03       Impact factor: 4.246

7.  Filamin A and Filamin B are co-expressed within neurons during periods of neuronal migration and can physically interact.

Authors:  Volney L Sheen; Yuanyi Feng; Donna Graham; Toshiro Takafuta; Sandor S Shapiro; Christopher A Walsh
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2002-11-01       Impact factor: 6.150

8.  Familial periventricular heterotopia: missense and distal truncating mutations of the FLN1 gene.

Authors:  F Moro; R Carrozzo; P Veggiotti; G Tortorella; D Toniolo; A Volzone; R Guerrini
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2002-03-26       Impact factor: 9.910

9.  Standards and guidelines for the interpretation of sequence variants: a joint consensus recommendation of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics and the Association for Molecular Pathology.

Authors:  Sue Richards; Nazneen Aziz; Sherri Bale; David Bick; Soma Das; Julie Gastier-Foster; Wayne W Grody; Madhuri Hegde; Elaine Lyon; Elaine Spector; Karl Voelkerding; Heidi L Rehm
Journal:  Genet Med       Date:  2015-03-05       Impact factor: 8.822

10.  47 patients with FLNA associated periventricular nodular heterotopia.

Authors:  Max Lange; Burkhard Kasper; Axel Bohring; Frank Rutsch; Gerhard Kluger; Sabine Hoffjan; Stephanie Spranger; Anne Behnecke; Andreas Ferbert; Andreas Hahn; Barbara Oehl-Jaschkowitz; Luitgard Graul-Neumann; Katharina Diepold; Isolde Schreyer; Matthias K Bernhard; Franziska Mueller; Ulrike Siebers-Renelt; Ana Beleza-Meireles; Goekhan Uyanik; Sandra Janssens; Eugen Boltshauser; Juergen Winkler; Gerhard Schuierer; Ute Hehr
Journal:  Orphanet J Rare Dis       Date:  2015-10-15       Impact factor: 4.123

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