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    Mosaic uniparental disomy results in GM1 gangliosidosis with normal enzyme assay
    Myers, KA ; Bennett, MF ; Chow, CW ; Carden, SM ; Mandelstam, SA ; Bahlo, M ; Scheffer, IE (WILEY, 2018-01)
    Inherited metabolic disorders are traditionally diagnosed using broad and expensive panels of screening tests, often including invasive skin and muscle biopsy. Proponents of next-generation genetic sequencing have argued that replacing these screening panels with whole exome sequencing (WES) would save money. Here, we present a complex patient in whom WES allowed diagnosis of GM1 gangliosidosis, caused by homozygous GLB1 mutations, resulting in β-galactosidase deficiency. A 10-year-old girl had progressive neurologic deterioration, macular cherry-red spot, and cornea verticillata. She had marked clinical improvement with initiation of the ketogenic diet. Comparative genomic hybridization microarray showed mosaic chromosome 3 paternal uniparental disomy (UPD). GM1 gangliosidosis was suspected, however β-galactosidase assay was normal. Trio WES identified a paternally-inherited pathogenic splice-site GLB1 mutation (c.75+2dupT). The girl had GM1 gangliosidosis; however, enzymatic testing in blood was normal, presumably compensated for by non-UPD cells. Severe neurologic dysfunction occurred due to disruptive effects of UPD brain cells.
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    Recessive variants in ZNF142 cause a complex neurodevelopmental disorder with intellectual disability, speech impairment, seizures, and dystonia
    Khan, K ; Zech, M ; Morgan, AT ; Amor, DJ ; Skorvanek, M ; Khan, TN ; Hildebrand, MS ; Jackson, VE ; Scerri, TS ; Coleman, M ; Rigbye, KA ; Scheffer, IE ; Bahlo, M ; Wagner, M ; Lam, DD ; Berutti, R ; Havrankova, P ; Fecikova, A ; Strom, TM ; Han, V ; Dosekova, P ; Gdovinova, Z ; Laccone, F ; Jameel, M ; Mooney, MR ; Baig, SM ; Jech, R ; Davis, EE ; Katsanis, N ; Winkelmann, J (NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2019-11)
    PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to expand the genetic architecture of neurodevelopmental disorders, and to characterize the clinical features of a novel cohort of affected individuals with variants in ZNF142, a C2H2 domain-containing transcription factor. METHODS: Four independent research centers used exome sequencing to elucidate the genetic basis of neurodevelopmental phenotypes in four unrelated families. Following bioinformatic filtering, query of control data sets, and secondary variant confirmation, we aggregated findings using an online data sharing platform. We performed in-depth clinical phenotyping in all affected individuals. RESULTS: We identified seven affected females in four pedigrees with likely pathogenic variants in ZNF142 that segregate with recessive disease. Affected cases in three families harbor either nonsense or frameshifting likely pathogenic variants predicted to undergo nonsense mediated decay. One additional trio bears ultrarare missense variants in conserved regions of ZNF142 that are predicted to be damaging to protein function. We performed clinical comparisons across our cohort and noted consistent presence of intellectual disability and speech impairment, with variable manifestation of seizures, tremor, and dystonia. CONCLUSION: Our aggregate data support a role for ZNF142 in nervous system development and add to the emergent list of zinc finger proteins that contribute to neurocognitive disorders.
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    In silico prioritization based on coexpression can aid epileptic encephalopathy gene discovery
    Oliver, KL ; Lukic, V ; Freytag, S ; Scheffer, IE ; Berkovic, SF ; Bahlo, M (LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS, 2016-02)
    OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the performance of an in silico prioritization approach that was applied to 179 epileptic encephalopathy candidate genes in 2013 and to expand the application of this approach to the whole genome based on expression data from the Allen Human Brain Atlas. METHODS: PubMed searches determined which of the 179 epileptic encephalopathy candidate genes had been validated. For validated genes, it was noted whether they were 1 of the 19 of 179 candidates prioritized in 2013. The in silico prioritization approach was applied genome-wide; all genes were ranked according to their coexpression strength with a reference set (i.e., 51 established epileptic encephalopathy genes) in both adult and developing human brain expression data sets. Candidate genes ranked in the top 10% for both data sets were cross-referenced with genes previously implicated in the epileptic encephalopathies due to a de novo variant. RESULTS: Five of 6 validated epileptic encephalopathy candidate genes were among the 19 prioritized in 2013 (odds ratio = 54, 95% confidence interval [7,∞], p = 4.5 × 10(-5), Fisher exact test); one gene was false negative. A total of 297 genes ranked in the top 10% for both the adult and developing brain data sets based on coexpression with the reference set. Of these, 9 had been previously implicated in the epileptic encephalopathies (FBXO41, PLXNA1, ACOT4, PAK6, GABBR2, YWHAG, NBEA, KNDC1, and SELRC1). CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that brain gene coexpression data can be used to assist epileptic encephalopathy gene discovery and propose 9 genes as strong epileptic encephalopathy candidates worthy of further investigation.
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    PRIMA1 mutation: a new cause of nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy
    Hildebrand, MS ; Tankard, R ; Gazina, EV ; Damiano, JA ; Lawrence, KM ; Dahl, H-HM ; Regan, BM ; Shearer, AE ; Smith, RJH ; Marini, C ; Guerrini, R ; Labate, A ; Gambardella, A ; Tinuper, P ; Lichetta, L ; Baldassari, S ; Bisulli, F ; Pippucci, T ; Scheffer, IE ; Reid, CA ; Petrou, S ; Bahlo, M ; Berkovic, SF (WILEY, 2015-08)
    OBJECTIVE: Nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy (NFLE) can be sporadic or autosomal dominant; some families have nicotinic acetylcholine receptor subunit mutations. We report a novel autosomal recessive phenotype in a single family and identify the causative gene. METHODS: Whole exome sequencing data was used to map the family, thereby narrowing exome search space, and then to identify the mutation. RESULTS: Linkage analysis using exome sequence data from two affected and two unaffected subjects showed homozygous linkage peaks on chromosomes 7, 8, 13, and 14 with maximum LOD scores between 1.5 and 1.93. Exome variant filtering under these peaks revealed that the affected siblings were homozygous for a novel splice site mutation (c.93+2T>C) in the PRIMA1 gene on chromosome 14. No additional PRIMA1 mutations were found in 300 other NFLE cases. The c.93+2T>C mutation was shown to lead to skipping of the first coding exon of the PRIMA1 mRNA using a minigene system. INTERPRETATION: PRIMA1 is a transmembrane protein that anchors acetylcholinesterase (AChE), an enzyme hydrolyzing acetycholine, to membrane rafts of neurons. PRiMA knockout mice have reduction of AChE and accumulation of acetylcholine at the synapse; our minigene analysis suggests that the c.93+2T>C mutation leads to knockout of PRIMA1. Mutations with gain of function effects in acetylcholine receptor subunits cause autosomal dominant NFLE. Thus, enhanced cholinergic responses are the likely cause of the severe NFLE and intellectual disability segregating in this family, representing the first recessive case to be reported and the first PRIMA1 mutation implicated in disease.
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    A set of regulatory genes co-expressed in embryonic human brain is implicated in disrupted speech development
    Eising, E ; Carrion-Castillo, A ; Vino, A ; Strand, EA ; Jakielski, KJ ; Scerri, TS ; Hildebrand, MS ; Webster, R ; Ma, A ; Mazoyer, B ; Francks, C ; Bahlo, M ; Scheffer, IE ; Morgan, AT ; Shriberg, LD ; Fisher, SE (NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2019-07)
    Genetic investigations of people with impaired development of spoken language provide windows into key aspects of human biology. Over 15 years after FOXP2 was identified, most speech and language impairments remain unexplained at the molecular level. We sequenced whole genomes of nineteen unrelated individuals diagnosed with childhood apraxia of speech, a rare disorder enriched for causative mutations of large effect. Where DNA was available from unaffected parents, we discovered de novo mutations, implicating genes, including CHD3, SETD1A and WDR5. In other probands, we identified novel loss-of-function variants affecting KAT6A, SETBP1, ZFHX4, TNRC6B and MKL2, regulatory genes with links to neurodevelopment. Several of the new candidates interact with each other or with known speech-related genes. Moreover, they show significant clustering within a single co-expression module of genes highly expressed during early human brain development. This study highlights gene regulatory pathways in the developing brain that may contribute to acquisition of proficient speech.
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    Reanalysis and optimisation of bioinformatic pipelines is critical for mutation detection
    Cowley, MJ ; Liu, Y-C ; Oliver, KL ; Carvill, G ; Myers, CT ; Gayevskiy, V ; Delatycki, M ; Vlaskamp, DRM ; Zhu, Y ; Mefford, H ; Buckley, MF ; Bahlo, M ; Scheffer, IE ; Dinger, ME ; Roscioli, T (WILEY-HINDAWI, 2019-04)
    Rapid advances in genomic technologies have facilitated the identification pathogenic variants causing human disease. We report siblings with developmental and epileptic encephalopathy due to a novel, shared heterozygous pathogenic 13 bp duplication in SYNGAP1 (c.435_447dup, p.(L150Vfs*6)) that was identified by whole genome sequencing (WGS). The pathogenic variant had escaped earlier detection via two methodologies: whole exome sequencing and high-depth targeted sequencing. Both technologies had produced reads carrying the variant, however, they were either not aligned due to the size of the insertion or aligned to multiple major histocompatibility complex (MHC) regions in the hg19 reference genome, making the critical reads unavailable for variant calling. The WGS pipeline followed different protocols, including alignment of reads to the GRCh37 reference genome, which lacks the additional MHC contigs. Our findings highlight the benefit of using orthogonal clinical bioinformatic pipelines and all relevant inheritance patterns to re-analyze genomic data in undiagnosed patients.
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    Epidemiology and etiology of infantile developmental and epileptic encephalopathies in Tasmania
    Ware, TL ; Huskins, SR ; Grinton, BE ; Liu, Y-C ; Bennett, MF ; Harvey, M ; McMahon, J ; Andreopoulos-Malikotsinas, D ; Bahlo, M ; Howell, KB ; Hildebrand, MS ; Damiano, JA ; Rosenfeld, A ; Mackay, MT ; Mandelstam, S ; Leventer, RJ ; Harvey, AS ; Freeman, JL ; Scheffer, IE ; Jones, DL ; Berkovic, SF (WILEY, 2019-09)
    We sought to determine incidence, etiologies, and yield of genetic testing in infantile onset developmental and epileptic encephalopathies (DEEs) in a population isolate, with an intensive multistage approach. Infants born in Tasmania between 2011 and 2016, with seizure onset <2 years of age, epileptiform EEG, frequent seizures, and developmental impairment, were included. Following review of EEG databases, medical records, brain MRIs, and other investigations, clinical genetic testing was undertaken with subsequent research interrogation of whole exome sequencing (WES) in unsolved cases. The incidence of infantile DEEs was 0.44/1000 per year (95% confidence interval 0.25 to 0.71), with 16 cases ascertained. The etiology was structural in 5/16 cases. A genetic basis was identified in 6 of the remaining 11 cases (3 gene panel, 3 WES). In two further cases, WES identified novel variants with strong in silico data; however, paternal DNA was not available to support pathogenicity. The etiology was not determined in 3/16 (19%) cases, with a candidate gene identified in one of these. Pursuing clinical imaging and genetic testing followed by WES at an intensive research level can give a high diagnostic yield in the infantile DEEs, providing a solid base for prognostic and genetic counseling.
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    Polygenic burden in focal and generalized epilepsies
    Leu, C ; Stevelink, R ; Smith, AW ; Goleva, SB ; Kanai, M ; Ferguson, L ; Campbell, C ; Kamatani, Y ; Okada, Y ; Sisodiya, SM ; Cavalleri, GL ; Koeleman, BPC ; Lerche, H ; Jehi, L ; Davis, LK ; Najm, IM ; Palotie, A ; Daly, MJ ; Busch, RM ; Lal, D (OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2019-11)
    Rare genetic variants can cause epilepsy, and genetic testing has been widely adopted for severe, paediatric-onset epilepsies. The phenotypic consequences of common genetic risk burden for epilepsies and their potential future clinical applications have not yet been determined. Using polygenic risk scores (PRS) from a European-ancestry genome-wide association study in generalized and focal epilepsy, we quantified common genetic burden in patients with generalized epilepsy (GE-PRS) or focal epilepsy (FE-PRS) from two independent non-Finnish European cohorts (Epi25 Consortium, n = 5705; Cleveland Clinic Epilepsy Center, n = 620; both compared to 20 435 controls). One Finnish-ancestry population isolate (Finnish-ancestry Epi25, n = 449; compared to 1559 controls), two European-ancestry biobanks (UK Biobank, n = 383 656; Vanderbilt biorepository, n = 49 494), and one Japanese-ancestry biobank (BioBank Japan, n = 168 680) were used for additional replications. Across 8386 patients with epilepsy and 622 212 population controls, we found and replicated significantly higher GE-PRS in patients with generalized epilepsy of European-ancestry compared to patients with focal epilepsy (Epi25: P = 1.64×10-15; Cleveland: P = 2.85×10-4; Finnish-ancestry Epi25: P = 1.80×10-4) or population controls (Epi25: P = 2.35×10-70; Cleveland: P = 1.43×10-7; Finnish-ancestry Epi25: P = 3.11×10-4; UK Biobank and Vanderbilt biorepository meta-analysis: P = 7.99×10-4). FE-PRS were significantly higher in patients with focal epilepsy compared to controls in the non-Finnish, non-biobank cohorts (Epi25: P = 5.74×10-19; Cleveland: P = 1.69×10-6). European ancestry-derived PRS did not predict generalized epilepsy or focal epilepsy in Japanese-ancestry individuals. Finally, we observed a significant 4.6-fold and a 4.5-fold enrichment of patients with generalized epilepsy compared to controls in the top 0.5% highest GE-PRS of the two non-Finnish European cohorts (Epi25: P = 2.60×10-15; Cleveland: P = 1.39×10-2). We conclude that common variant risk associated with epilepsy is significantly enriched in multiple cohorts of patients with epilepsy compared to controls-in particular for generalized epilepsy. As sample sizes and PRS accuracy continue to increase with further common variant discovery, PRS could complement established clinical biomarkers and augment genetic testing for patient classification, comorbidity research, and potentially targeted treatment.
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    Unstable TTTTA/TTTCA expansions in MARCH6 are associated with Familial Adult Myoclonic Epilepsy type 3
    Florian, RT ; Kraft, F ; Leitao, E ; Kaya, S ; Klebe, S ; Magnin, E ; van Rootselaar, A-F ; Buratti, J ; Kuehnel, T ; Schroeder, C ; Giesselmann, S ; Tschernoster, N ; Altmueller, J ; lamiral, A ; Keren, B ; Nava, C ; Bouteiller, D ; Forlani, S ; Jornea, L ; Kubica, R ; Ye, T ; Plassard, D ; Jost, B ; Meyer, V ; Deleuze, J-F ; Delpu, Y ; Avarello, MDM ; Vijfhuizen, LS ; Rudolf, G ; Hirsch, E ; Kroes, T ; Reif, PS ; Rosenow, F ; Ganos, C ; Vidailhet, M ; Thivard, L ; Mathieu, A ; Bourgeron, T ; Kurth, I ; Rafehi, H ; Steenpass, L ; Horsthemke, B ; Berkovic, SF ; Bisulli, F ; Brancati, F ; Canafoglia, L ; Casari, G ; Guerrini, R ; Ishiura, H ; Licchetta, L ; Mei, D ; Pippucci, T ; Sadleir, L ; Scheffer, IE ; Striano, P ; Tinuper, P ; Tsuji, S ; Zara, F ; LeGuern, E ; Klein, KM ; Labauge, P ; Bennett, MF ; Bahlo, M ; Gecz, J ; Corbett, MA ; Tijssen, MAJ ; van den Maagdenberg, AMJM ; Depienne, C (NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2019-10-29)
    Familial Adult Myoclonic Epilepsy (FAME) is a genetically heterogeneous disorder characterized by cortical tremor and seizures. Intronic TTTTA/TTTCA repeat expansions in SAMD12 (FAME1) are the main cause of FAME in Asia. Using genome sequencing and repeat-primed PCR, we identify another site of this repeat expansion, in MARCH6 (FAME3) in four European families. Analysis of single DNA molecules with nanopore sequencing and molecular combing show that expansions range from 3.3 to 14 kb on average. However, we observe considerable variability in expansion length and structure, supporting the existence of multiple expansion configurations in blood cells and fibroblasts of the same individual. Moreover, the largest expansions are associated with micro-rearrangements occurring near the expansion in 20% of cells. This study provides further evidence that FAME is caused by intronic TTTTA/TTTCA expansions in distinct genes and reveals that expansions exhibit an unexpectedly high somatic instability that can ultimately result in genomic rearrangements.
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    Intronic ATTTC repeat expansions in STARD7 in familial adult myoclonic epilepsy linked to chromosome 2
    Corbett, MA ; Kroes, T ; Veneziano, L ; Bennett, MF ; Florian, R ; Schneider, AL ; Coppola, A ; Licchetta, L ; Franceschetti, S ; Suppa, A ; Wenger, A ; Mei, D ; Pendziwiat, M ; Kaya, S ; Delledonne, M ; Straussberg, R ; Xumerle, L ; Regan, B ; Crompton, D ; van Rootselaar, A-F ; Correll, A ; Catford, R ; Bisulli, F ; Chakraborty, S ; Baldassari, S ; Tinuper, P ; Barton, K ; Carswell, S ; Smith, M ; Berardelli, A ; Carroll, R ; Gardner, A ; Friend, KL ; Blatt, I ; Iacomino, M ; Di Bonaventura, C ; Striano, S ; Buratti, J ; Keren, B ; Nava, C ; Forlani, S ; Rudolf, G ; Hirsch, E ; Leguern, E ; Labauge, P ; Balestrini, S ; Sander, JW ; Afawi, Z ; Helbig, I ; Ishiura, H ; Tsuji, S ; Sisodiya, SM ; Casari, G ; Sadleir, LG ; van Coller, R ; Tijssen, MAJ ; Klein, KM ; van den Maagdenberg, AMJM ; Zara, F ; Guerrini, R ; Berkovic, SF ; Pippucci, T ; Canafoglia, L ; Bahlo, M ; Striano, P ; Scheffer, IE ; Brancati, F ; Depienne, C ; Gecz, J (NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2019-10-29)
    Familial Adult Myoclonic Epilepsy (FAME) is characterised by cortical myoclonic tremor usually from the second decade of life and overt myoclonic or generalised tonic-clonic seizures. Four independent loci have been implicated in FAME on chromosomes (chr) 2, 3, 5 and 8. Using whole genome sequencing and repeat primed PCR, we provide evidence that chr2-linked FAME (FAME2) is caused by an expansion of an ATTTC pentamer within the first intron of STARD7. The ATTTC expansions segregate in 158/158 individuals typically affected by FAME from 22 pedigrees including 16 previously reported families recruited worldwide. RNA sequencing from patient derived fibroblasts shows no accumulation of the AUUUU or AUUUC repeat sequences and STARD7 gene expression is not affected. These data, in combination with other genes bearing similar mutations that have been implicated in FAME, suggest ATTTC expansions may cause this disorder, irrespective of the genomic locus involved.