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Gene Mutation Analysis in 253 Chinese Children with Unexplained Epilepsy and Intellectual/Developmental Disabilities
Authors:Yujia Zhang  Weijing Kong  Yang Gao  Xiaoyan Liu  Kai Gao  Han Xie  Ye Wu  Yuehua Zhang  Jingmin Wang  Feng Gao  Xiru Wu  Yuwu Jiang
Institution:1. Department of Pediatrics and Pediatric Epilepsy Center, Peking University First Hospital, Beijing, China.; 2. Center of Epilepsy, Beijing Institute for Brain Disorders, Beijing, China.; 3. Department of Neurosurgery, the Second Hospital of Dalian Medical University, Dalian, China.; 4. The Children’s Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine, Zhejiang, China.; University of Texas Health Science Center, UNITED STATES,
Abstract:

Objective

Epilepsy and intellectual/developmental disabilities (ID/DD) have a high rate of co-occurrence. Here, we investigated gene mutations in Chinese children with unexplained epilepsy and ID/DD.

Methods

We used targeted next-generation sequencing to detect mutations within 300 genes related to epilepsy and ID/DD in 253 Chinese children with unexplained epilepsy and ID/DD. A series of filtering criteria was used to find the possible pathogenic variations. Validation and parental origin analyses were performed by Sanger sequencing. We reviewed the phenotypes of patients with each mutated gene.

Results

We identified 32 novel and 16 reported mutations within 24 genes in 46 patients. The detection rate was 18% (46/253) in the whole group and 26% (17/65) in the early-onset (before three months after birth) epilepsy group. To our knowledge, we are the first to report KCNAB1 is a disease-causing gene of epilepsy by identifying a novel de novo mutation (c.1062dupCA p.Leu355HisfsTer5) within this gene in one patient with early infantile epileptic encephalopathy (EIEE). Patients with an SCN1A mutation accounted for the largest proportion, 17% (8/46). A total of 38% (9/24) of the mutated genes re-occurred at least 2 times and 63% (15/24) occurred only one time. Ion channel genes are the most common (8/24) and genes related to synapse are the next most common to occur (5/24).

Significance

We have established genetic diagnosis for 46 patients of our cohort. Early-onset epilepsy had the highest detection rate. KCNAB1 mutation was first identified in EIEE patient. We expanded the phenotype and mutation spectrum of the genes we identified. The mutated genes in this cohort are mostly isolated. This suggests that epilepsy and ID/DD phenotypes occur as a consequence of brain dysfunction caused by a highly diverse population of mutated genes. Ion channel genes and genes related to synapse were more common mutated in this patient cohort.
Keywords:
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