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Ultra-rare genetic variation in common epilepsies: a case-control sequencing study

Authors :
Andrew S Allen
Susannah T Bellows
Samuel F Berkovic
Joshua Bridgers
Rosemary Burgess
Gianpiero Cavalleri
Seo-Kyung Chung
Patrick Cossette
Norman Delanty
Dennis Dlugos
Michael P Epstein
Catharine Freyer
David B Goldstein
Erin L Heinzen
Michael S Hildebrand
Michael R Johnson
Ruben Kuzniecky
Daniel H Lowenstein
Anthony G Marson
Richard Mayeux
Caroline Mebane
Heather C Mefford
Terence J O'Brien
Ruth Ottman
Steven Petrou
Slavgé Petrovski
William O Pickrell
Annapurna Poduri
Rodney A Radtke
Mark I Rees
Brigid M Regan
Zhong Ren
Ingrid E Scheffer
Graeme J Sills
Rhys H Thomas
Quanli Wang
Bassel Abou-Khalil
Brian K Alldredge
Dina Amrom
Eva Andermann
Frederick Andermann
Jocelyn F. Bautista
Judith Bluvstein
Alex Boro
Gregory D Cascino
Damian Consalvo
Patricia Crumrine
Orrin Devinsky
Miguel Fiol
Nathan B Fountain
Jacqueline French
Daniel Friedman
Eric B Geller
Tracy Glauser
Simon Glynn
Kevin Haas
Sheryl R Haut
Jean Hayward
Sandra L Helmers
Sucheta Joshi
Andres Kanner
Heidi E Kirsch
Robert C Knowlton
Eric H Kossoff
Rachel Kuperman
Paul V Motika
Edward J Novotny
Juliann M Paolicchi
Jack M Parent
Kristen Park
Lynette G Sadleir
Renée A. Shellhaas
Elliott H Sherr
Jerry J. Shih
Shlomo Shinnar
Rani K Singh
Joseph Sirven
Michael C Smith
Joseph Sullivan
Liu Lin Thio
Anu Venkat
Eileen P.G Vining
Gretchen K Von Allmen
Judith L Weisenberg
Peter Widdess-Walsh
Melodie R Winawer
Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust- BRC Funding
Source :
The Lancet. Neurology
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2017.

Abstract

Summary Background Despite progress in understanding the genetics of rare epilepsies, the more common epilepsies have proven less amenable to traditional gene-discovery analyses. We aimed to assess the contribution of ultra-rare genetic variation to common epilepsies. Methods We did a case-control sequencing study with exome sequence data from unrelated individuals clinically evaluated for one of the two most common epilepsy syndromes: familial genetic generalised epilepsy, or familial or sporadic non-acquired focal epilepsy. Individuals of any age were recruited between Nov 26, 2007, and Aug 2, 2013, through the multicentre Epilepsy Phenome/Genome Project and Epi4K collaborations, and samples were sequenced at the Institute for Genomic Medicine (New York, USA) between Feb 6, 2013, and Aug 18, 2015. To identify epilepsy risk signals, we tested all protein-coding genes for an excess of ultra-rare genetic variation among the cases, compared with control samples with no known epilepsy or epilepsy comorbidity sequenced through unrelated studies. Findings We separately compared the sequence data from 640 individuals with familial genetic generalised epilepsy and 525 individuals with familial non-acquired focal epilepsy to the same group of 3877 controls, and found significantly higher rates of ultra-rare deleterious variation in genes established as causative for dominant epilepsy disorders (familial genetic generalised epilepsy: odd ratio [OR] 2·3, 95% CI 1·7–3·2, p=9·1 × 10 −8 ; familial non-acquired focal epilepsy 3·6, 2·7–4·9, p=1·1 × 10 −17 ). Comparison of an additional cohort of 662 individuals with sporadic non-acquired focal epilepsy to controls did not identify study-wide significant signals. For the individuals with familial non-acquired focal epilepsy, we found that five known epilepsy genes ranked as the top five genes enriched for ultra-rare deleterious variation. After accounting for the control carrier rate, we estimate that these five genes contribute to the risk of epilepsy in approximately 8% of individuals with familial non-acquired focal epilepsy. Our analyses showed that no individual gene was significantly associated with familial genetic generalised epilepsy; however, known epilepsy genes had lower p values relative to the rest of the protein-coding genes (p=5·8 × 10 −8 ) that were lower than expected from a random sampling of genes. Interpretation We identified excess ultra-rare variation in known epilepsy genes, which establishes a clear connection between the genetics of common and rare, severe epilepsies, and shows that the variants responsible for epilepsy risk are exceptionally rare in the general population. Our results suggest that the emerging paradigm of targeting of treatments to the genetic cause in rare devastating epilepsies might also extend to a proportion of common epilepsies. These findings might allow clinicians to broadly explain the cause of these syndromes to patients, and lay the foundation for possible precision treatments in the future. Funding National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), and Epilepsy Research UK.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14744422
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet. Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....72fdd521cdd0a2e7dbb4097ff8a65438