Abstract
Background
IFIH1
variants have been reported to be associated with immune-related disorders with/without seizures. It is unknown whether
IFIH1
variants are associated with common epilepsy without acquired causes and the mechanism underlying phenotypic variation remains elusive.
Methods
Trio-based whole-exome sequencing was performed on patients with febrile seizures or epilepsy with antecedent febrile seizures. Previously reported variants were systematically reviewed to investigate genotype-phenotype associations.
Results
Two de novo heterozygous and three biallelic missense variants were identified in five patients with generalised epilepsy with antecedent febrile seizures. The variants were predicted to be damaging by in silico tools and were associated with hydrogen bonding changes to neighbouring amino acids or decreased protein stability. Patients exhibited an early onset age and became seizure-free with favourable outcome. Further analysis revealed that de novo missense variants located in the Hel region resulted in seizures with multiple neurological abnormalities, while those in the pincer domain or C-terminal domain led to seizures with normal neurodevelopment, suggesting a sub-molecular effect. Biallelic missense variants, which were inherited from unaffected parents and presented low allele frequencies in general populations, were associated with seizures without neurological abnormalities. Truncation variants were related to refractory epilepsy and severe developmental delay, suggesting a genotype-phenotype correlation.
IFIH1
is predominantly expressed in the neonatal stage and decreases dramatically in the adulthood, which is consistent with the early onset age and favourable outcome of the patients.
Conclusions
IFIH1
variants are potentially associated with generalised epilepsy with antecedent febrile seizures. The sub-molecular implication and genotype-phenotype association help explain phenotype variations of
IFIH1
variants.
Funder
Science and Technology Project of Guangzhou
Multi-center Clinical Research Fund Project of the Second Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation of Guangdong Province