29 research outputs found

    Contribution of copy number variants (CNVs) to congenital, unexplained intellectual and developmental disabilities in Lebanese patients

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    International audienceBackground: Chromosomal microarray analysis (CMA) is currently the most widely adopted clinical test for patients with unexplained intellectual disability (ID), developmental delay (DD), and congenital anomalies. Its use has revealed the capacity to detect copy number variants (CNVs), as well as regions of homozygosity, that, based on their distribution on chromosomes, indicate uniparental disomy or parental consanguinity that is suggestive of an increased probability of recessive disease. Results: We screened 149 Lebanese probands with ID/DD and 99 healthy controls using the Affymetrix Cyto 2.7 M and SNP6.0 arrays. We report all identified CNVs, which we divided into groups. Pathogenic CNVs were identified in 12.1% of the patients. We review the genotype/phenotype correlation in a patient with a 1q44 microdeletion and refine the minimal critical regions responsible for the 10q26 and 16q monosomy syndromes. Several likely causative CNVs were also detected, including new homozygous microdeletions (9p23p24.1, 10q25.2, and 8p23.1) in 3 patients born to consanguineous parents, involving potential candidate genes. However, the clinical interpretation of several other CNVs remains uncertain, including a microdeletion affecting ATRNL1. This CNV of unknown significance was inherited from the patient's unaffected-mother; therefore, additional ethnically matched controls must be screened to obtain enough evidence for classification of this CNV. Conclusion: This study has provided supporting evidence that whole-genome analysis is a powerful method for uncovering chromosomal imbalances, regardless of consanguinity in the parents of patients and despite the challenge presented by analyzing some CNVs

    Severe neonatal seizures: From molecular diagnosis to precision therapy?

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    International audienceEarly onset epileptic encephalopathies (EOEE) are heterogeneous group of severe epilepsies that still need to be better defined and characterized. On a genetic point of view, several dozen of genes have been associated with EOEE, and to date, it is difficult to find a common mechanism to explain EOEE. In this short review, we show that two mains genes are involved in EOEE: STXBP1 and KCNQ2. Focusing on KCNQ2 related EOEE, we show that a relatively similar phenotype can be related to various consequences of mutations on a single gene. This will probably challenge the treatment of EOEE patients

    NAPB and developmental and epileptic encephalopathy: Description of the electroclinical profile associated with a novel pathogenic variant

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    International audienceDevelopmental and epileptic encephalopathies (DEE) are a group of neurodevelopmental disorders characterized by epileptic seizures associated with developmental delay or regression. DEE are genetically heterogeneous, and the proteins involved play roles in multiple pathways such as synaptic transmission, metabolism, neuronal development or maturation, transcriptional regulation, and intracellular trafficking. We performed whole exome sequencing on a consanguineous family with three children presenting an early onset (<6 months) with clusters of seizures characterized by oculomotor and vegetative manifestations, with an occipital origin. Before 1 year of age, interictal electroencephalographic recordings were well organized and neurodevelopment was unremarkable. Then, a severe regression occurred. We identified a novel homozygous protein-truncating variant in the NAPB (N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive fusion [NSF] attachment protein beta) gene that encodes the βSNAP protein, a key regulator of NSF-adenosine triphosphatase. This enzyme is essential for synaptic transmission by disassembling and recycling proteins of the SNARE complex. Here, we describe the electroclinical profile of each patient during the disease course. Our findings strengthen the association between biallelic variants in NAPB and DEE and refine the associated phenotype. We suggest including this gene in the targeted epilepsy gene panels used for routine diagnosis of unexplained epilepsy

    The phenotype caused by recessive variations in SLC25A22: Report of a new case and literature review

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    International audienceWe describe the clinical, electroencephalography (EEG), and developmental features of a patient with developmental and epileptic encephalopathy due to a homozygous pathogenic variation of mitochondrial glutamate/H+ symporter SLC25A22. Epilepsy began during the first week of life with focal onset seizures. Interictal EEG revealed a suppression-burst pattern with extensive periods of non-activity. The prospective follow-up confirmed developmental encephalopathy as well as ongoing active epilepsy and almost no sign of development at 8 years of age. We confirm in the following paper that SLC25A22 recessive variations may cause a severe developmental and epileptic encephalopathy characterized by a suppression-burst pattern. On the basis of an in-depth literature review, we also provide an overview of this rare genetic cause of neonatal onset epilepsy

    Homozygous TBC1D24 mutation in two siblings with familial infantile myoclonic epilepsy (FIME) and moderate intellectual disability

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    International audienceMutations in the TBC1D24 gene were first reported in an Italian family with a unique epileptic phenotype consisting of drug-responsive, early-onset idiopathic myoclonic seizures. Patients presented with isolated bilateral or focal myoclonia, which could evolve to long-lasting attacks without loss of consciousness, with a peculiar reflex component, and were associated with generalized tonic—clonic seizures. This entity was named ''familial infantile myoclonic epilepsy'' (FIME). More recently, TBC1D24 mutations have been shown to cause a variable range of disorders, including epilepsy of various seizure types and severity, non-syndromic deafness, and DOORS syndrome. We report on the electro-clinical features of two brothers, born to first-cousin parents, affected with infantile-onset myoclonic epilepsy. The peculiar epileptic presentation prompted us to perform direct sequencing of the TBC1D24 gene. The patients had very early onset of focal myoclonic fits with variable topography, lasting a few minutes to several hours, without loss of consciousness, which frequently evolved to generalized myoclonus or myoclonic status. Reflex myoclonia were noticed in one patient. Neurological outcome was marked by moderate intellectual disability. Despite the high frequency of seizures, repeated EEG recordings showed normal background rhythm and rare interictal spikes and waves. We found a homozygous missense mutation , c.457G>A/p.Glu153Lys, in the two affected brothers. This observation combined with recent data from the literature, suggest that mutations in TBCD24 cause a pathological continuum, with FIME at the ''benign'' end and severe drug-refractory epileptic encephalopathy on the severe end. Early-onset myoclonic epilepsy with focal and generalized myoclonic seizures is a common characteristic of this continuum

    Evidence that homozygous PTPRD gene microdeletion causes trigonocephaly, hearing loss, and intellectual disability

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    International audienceBackground: The premature fusion of metopic sutures results in the clinical phenotype of trigonocephaly. An association of this characteristic with the monosomy 9p syndrome is well established and the receptor-type protein tyrosine phosphatase gene (PTPRD), located in the 9p24.1p23 region and encoding a major component of the excitatory and inhibitory synaptic organization, is considered as a good candidate to be responsible for this form of craniosynostosis. Moreover PTPRD is known to recruit multiple postsynaptic partners such as IL1RAPL1 which gene alterations lead to non syndromic intellectual disability (ID). Results: We describe a 30 month old boy with severe intellectual disability, trigonocephaly and dysmorphic facial features such as a midface hypoplasia, a flat nose, a depressed nasal bridge, hypertelorism, a long philtrum and a drooping mouth. Microarray chromosomal analysis revealed the presence of a homozygous deletion involving the PTPRD gene, located on chromosome 9p22.3. Reverse Transcription PCR (RT- PCR) amplifications all along the gene failed to amplify the patient's cDNA in fibroblasts, indicating the presence of two null PTPRD alleles. Synaptic PTPRD interacts with IL1RAPL1 which defects have been associated with intellectual disability (ID) and autism spectrum disorder. The absence of the PTPRD transcript leads to a decrease in the expression of IL1RAPL1. These results suggest the direct involvement of PTPRD in ID, which is consistent with the PTPRD -/- mice phenotype. Deletions of PTPRD have been previously suggested as a cause of trigonocephaly in patients with monosomy 9p and genome-wide association study suggested variations in PTPRD are associated with hearing loss. Conclusions: The deletion identified in the reported patient supports previous hypotheses on its function in ID and hearing loss. However, its involvement in the occurrence of metopic synostosis is still to be discussed as more investigation of patients with the 9p monosomy syndrome is required

    Loss of NDST1 N -sulfotransferase activity is associated with autosomal recessive intellectual disability

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    International audienceIntellectual Disability (ID) is the major cause of handicap, affecting nearly 3% of the general population, and is highly genetically heterogenous with more than a thousand genes involved. Exome sequencing performed in two independent families identified the same missense variant, p.(Gly611Ser), in the NDST1 (N-deacetylase/N-sulfotransferase member 1) gene. This variant had been previously found in ID patients of two other families but has never been functionally characterized. The NDST1 gene encodes a bifunctional enzyme that catalyzes both N-deacetylation and N-sulfation of N-acetyl-glucosamine residues during heparan sulfate (HS) biosynthesis. This step is essential because it influences the downstream enzymatic modifications and thereby determines the overall structure and sulfation degree of the HS polysaccharide chain. To discriminate between a rare polymorphism and a pathogenic variant, we compared the enzymatic properties of wild-type and mutant NDST1 proteins. We found that the p.(Gly611Ser) variant results in a complete loss of N-sulfotransferase activity while the N-deacetylase activity is retained. NDST1 shows the highest and the most homogeneous expression in the human cerebral structures compared to the other members of the NDST gene family. These results indicate that a loss of NDST1 N-sulfation activity is associated with impaired cognitive functions
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