1 research outputs found
Low penetrance and effect on protein secretionof LGI1 mutations causing autosomal dominantlateral temporal epilepsy
Purpose: To describe the clinical and genetic findings of
four families with autosomal dominant lateral temporal
epilepsy.
Methods: A personal and family history was obtained
from each affected and unaffected subject along with a
physical and neurologic examination. Routine electroencephalography
and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
studies were performed in almost all patients. DNAs from
family members were screened for LGI1 mutations. The
effects of mutations on Lgi1 protein secretion were
determined in transfected culture cells.
Key Findings: The four families included a total of 11
patients (two deceased), six of whom had lateral temporal
epilepsy with auditory aura. Age at onset was in the
second decade of life; seizures were well controlled by
antiepileptic treatment and MRI studies were normal.
We found two pathogenic LGI1 mutations with uncommonly
low penetrance: the R136W mutation, previously
detected in a sporadic case with telephone-induced partial
seizures, gave rise to the epileptic phenotype in
three of nine mutation carriers in one family; the novel
C179R mutation caused epilepsy in an isolated patient
from a family where the mutation segregated. Another
novel pathogenic mutation, I122T, and a nonsynonymous
variant, I359V, were found in the two other families. Protein
secretion tests showed that the R136W and I122T
mutations inhibited secretion of the mutant proteins,
whereas I359V had no effect on protein secretion; C179R
was not tested, because of its predictable effect on protein
folding.
Significance: These findings suggest that some LGI1 mutations
may have a weak penetrance in families with complex
inheritance pattern, or isolated patients, and that the
protein secretion test, together with other predictive criteria,
may help recognize pathogenic LGI1 mutations.
KEY WORDS: Autosomal dominant lateral temporal epilepsy,
LGI1, Mutation, Low penetrance, Protein secretion