Publication:
Heterogeneous contribution of microdeletions in the development of common generalised and focal epilepsies

Thumbnail Image

Date

2017

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

BMJ Publishing Group
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Citation

Pérez-Palma, E., I. Helbig, K. M. Klein, V. Anttila, H. Horn, E. M. Reinthaler, P. Gormley, et al. 2017. “Heterogeneous contribution of microdeletions in the development of common generalised and focal epilepsies.” Journal of Medical Genetics 54 (9): 598-606. doi:10.1136/jmedgenet-2016-104495. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jmedgenet-2016-104495.

Research Data

Abstract

Background: Microdeletions are known to confer risk to epilepsy, particularly at genomic rearrangement ‘hotspot’ loci. However, microdeletion burden not overlapping these regions or within different epilepsy subtypes has not been ascertained. Objective: To decipher the role of microdeletions outside hotspots loci and risk assessment by epilepsy subtype. Methods: We assessed the burden, frequency and genomic content of rare, large microdeletions found in a previously published cohort of 1366 patients with genetic generalised epilepsy (GGE) in addition to two sets of additional unpublished genome-wide microdeletions found in 281 patients with rolandic epilepsy (RE) and 807 patients with adult focal epilepsy (AFE), totalling 2454 cases. Microdeletions were assessed in a combined and subtype-specific approaches against 6746 controls. Results: When hotspots are considered, we detected an enrichment of microdeletions in the combined epilepsy analysis (adjusted p=1.06×10−6,OR 1.89, 95% CI 1.51 to 2.35). Epilepsy subtype-specific analyses showed that hotspot microdeletions in the GGE subgroup contribute most of the overall signal (adjusted p=9.79×10−12, OR 7.45, 95% CI 4.20–13.5). Outside hotspots , microdeletions were enriched in the GGE cohort for neurodevelopmental genes (adjusted p=9.13×10−3,OR 2.85, 95% CI 1.62–4.94). No additional signal was observed for RE and AFE. Still, gene-content analysis identified known (NRXN1, RBFOX1 and PCDH7) and novel (LOC102723362) candidate genes across epilepsy subtypes that were not deleted in controls. Conclusions: Our results show a heterogeneous effect of recurrent and non-recurrent microdeletions as part of the genetic architecture of GGE and a minor contribution in the aetiology of RE and AFE.

Description

Keywords

microdeletions, epilepsy, neurodevelopmental, hotspot loci

Terms of Use

This article is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Other Posted Material (LAA), as set forth at Terms of Service

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Related Stories