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Genomic analysis identifies candidate pathogenic variants in 9 of 18 patients with unexplained West syndrome
Authors:Naomi Hino-Fukuyo  Atsuo Kikuchi  Natsuko Arai-Ichinoi  Tetsuya Niihori  Ryo Sato  Tasuku Suzuki  Hiroki Kudo  Yuko Sato  Tojo Nakayama  Yosuke Kakisaka  Yuki Kubota  Tomoko Kobayashi  Ryo Funayama  Keiko Nakayama  Mitsugu Uematsu  Yoko Aoki  Kazuhiro Haginoya  Shigeo Kure
Affiliation:1.Department of Pediatrics,Tohoku University School of Medicine,Sendai,Japan;2.Department of Medical Genetics,Tohoku University School of Medicine,Sendai,Japan;3.Department of Epileptology,Tohoku University School of Medicine,Sendai,Japan;4.Division of Genomic Medicine Support and Genetic Counseling, Department of Education and Training,Tohoku Medical Megabank Organization (ToMMo), Tohoku University,Sendai,Japan;5.Division of Cell Proliferation,United Centers for Advanced Research and Translational Medicine, Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine,Sendai,Japan;6.Department of Pediatric Neurology,Takuto Rehabilitation Center for Children,Sendai,Japan
Abstract:West syndrome, which is narrowly defined as infantile spasms that occur in clusters and hypsarrhythmia on EEG, is the most common early-onset epileptic encephalopathy (EOEE). Patients with West syndrome may have clear etiologies, including perinatal events, infections, gross chromosomal abnormalities, or cases followed by other EOEEs. However, the genetic etiology of most cases of West syndrome remains unexplained. DNA from 18 patients with unexplained West syndrome was subjected to microarray-based comparative genomic hybridization (array CGH), followed by trio-based whole-exome sequencing in 14 unsolved families. We identified candidate pathogenic variants in 50 % of the patients (n = 9/18). The array CGH revealed candidate pathogenic copy number variations in four cases (22 %, 4/18), including an Xq28 duplication, a 16p11.2 deletion, a 16p13.1 deletion and a 19p13.2 deletion disrupting CACNA1A. Whole-exome sequencing identified candidate mutations in known epilepsy genes in five cases (36 %, 5/14). Three candidate de novo mutations were identified in three cases, with two mutations occurring in two new candidate genes (NR2F1 and CACNA2D1) (21 %, 3/14). Hemizygous candidate mutations in ALG13 and BRWD3 were identified in the other two cases (14 %, 2/14). Evaluating a panel of 67 known EOEE genes failed to identify significant mutations. Despite the heterogeneity of unexplained West syndrome, the combination of array CGH and whole-exome sequencing is an effective means of evaluating the genetic background in unexplained West syndrome. We provide additional evidence for NR2F1 as a causative gene and for CACNA2D1 and BRWD3 as candidate genes for West syndrome.
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