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Merck

Rare deletions at 16p13.11 predispose to a diverse spectrum of sporadic epilepsy syndromes.

American journal of human genetics (2010-04-20)
Erin L Heinzen, Rodney A Radtke, Thomas J Urban, Gianpiero L Cavalleri, Chantal Depondt, Anna C Need, Nicole M Walley, Paola Nicoletti, Dongliang Ge, Claudia B Catarino, John S Duncan, Dalia Kasperaviciūte, Sarah K Tate, Luis O Caboclo, Josemir W Sander, Lisa Clayton, Kristen N Linney, Kevin V Shianna, Curtis E Gumbs, Jason Smith, Kenneth D Cronin, Jessica M Maia, Colin P Doherty, Massimo Pandolfo, David Leppert, Lefkos T Middleton, Rachel A Gibson, Michael R Johnson, Paul M Matthews, David Hosford, Reetta Kälviäinen, Kai Eriksson, Anne-Mari Kantanen, Thomas Dorn, Jörg Hansen, Günter Krämer, Bernhard J Steinhoff, Heinz-Gregor Wieser, Dominik Zumsteg, Marcos Ortega, Nicholas W Wood, Julie Huxley-Jones, Mohamad Mikati, William B Gallentine, Aatif M Husain, Patrick G Buckley, Ray L Stallings, Mihai V Podgoreanu, Norman Delanty, Sanjay M Sisodiya, David B Goldstein
RESUMEN

Deletions at 16p13.11 are associated with schizophrenia, mental retardation, and most recently idiopathic generalized epilepsy. To evaluate the role of 16p13.11 deletions, as well as other structural variation, in epilepsy disorders, we used genome-wide screens to identify copy number variation in 3812 patients with a diverse spectrum of epilepsy syndromes and in 1299 neurologically-normal controls. Large deletions (> 100 kb) at 16p13.11 were observed in 23 patients, whereas no control had a deletion greater than 16 kb. Patients, even those with identically sized 16p13.11 deletions, presented with highly variable epilepsy phenotypes. For a subset of patients with a 16p13.11 deletion, we show a consistent reduction of expression for included genes, suggesting that haploinsufficiency might contribute to pathogenicity. We also investigated another possible mechanism of pathogenicity by using hybridization-based capture and next-generation sequencing of the homologous chromosome for ten 16p13.11-deletion patients to look for unmasked recessive mutations. Follow-up genotyping of suggestive polymorphisms failed to identify any convincing recessive-acting mutations in the homologous interval corresponding to the deletion. The observation that two of the 16p13.11 deletions were larger than 2 Mb in size led us to screen for other large deletions. We found 12 additional genomic regions harboring deletions > 2 Mb in epilepsy patients, and none in controls. Additional evaluation is needed to characterize the role of these exceedingly large, non-locus-specific deletions in epilepsy. Collectively, these data implicate 16p13.11 and possibly other large deletions as risk factors for a wide range of epilepsy disorders, and they appear to point toward haploinsufficiency as a contributor to the pathogenicity of deletions.