NGS-Based Identification of Two Novel PCDH19 Mutations in Female Patients with Early-Onset Epilepsy

Author:

Szalai Renata1ORCID,Hadzsiev Kinga1ORCID,Till Agnes1,Fogarasi Andras23ORCID,Bodo Timea2,Buki Gergely1,Banfai Zsolt1ORCID,Bene Judit1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Genetics, University of Pecs Medical School, 7624 Pecs, Hungary

2. Child Neurology Department, Bethesda Children’s Hospital, 1146 Budapest, Hungary

3. Andras Peto Faculty, Semmelweis University, 1125 Budapest, Hungary

Abstract

Developmental and epileptic encephalopathy-9 (DEE9) is characterized by seizure onset in infancy, mild to severe intellectual impairment, and psychiatric features and is caused by a mutation in the PCDH19 gene on chromosome Xq22. The rare, unusual X-linked type of disorder affects heterozygous females and mosaic males; transmitting males are unaffected. In our study, 165 patients with epilepsy were tested by Next Generation Sequencing (NGS)-based panel and exome sequencing using Illumina technology. PCDH19 screening identified three point mutations, one indel, and one 29 bp-long deletion in five unrelated female probands. Two novel mutations, c.1152_1180del (p.Gln385Serfs*6) and c.830_831delinsAA (p.Phe277*), were identified and found to be de novo pathogenic. Moreover, among the three inherited mutations, two originated from asymptomatic mothers and one from an affected father. The PCDH19 c.1682C>T and c.1711G>T mutations were present in the DNA samples of asymptomatic mothers. After targeted parental testing, X chromosome inactivation tests and Sanger sequencing were carried out for mosaicism examination on maternal saliva samples in the two asymptomatic PCDH19 mutation carrier subjects. Tissue mosaicism and X-inactivation tests were negative. Our results support the opportunity for reduced penetrance in DEE9 and contribute to expanding the genotype–phenotype spectrum of PCDH19-related epilepsy.

Funder

University of Pécs, Medical School, Research Fund

Publisher

MDPI AG

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