Somatic Mosaic Pathogenic Variant Gradient Detected in Trace Brain Tissue From Stereo-EEG Depth Electrodes

Author:

Ye ZimengORCID,Bennett Mark F.ORCID,Neal Andrew,Laing Joshua A.,Hunn Martin K.,Wittayacharoenpong Thanomporn,Todaro Marian,Patel Sheila K.,Bahlo MelanieORCID,Kwan Patrick,O'Brien Terence J.,Scheffer Ingrid E.ORCID,Berkovic Samuel F.ORCID,Perucca PieroORCID,Hildebrand Michael S.

Abstract

Background and ObjectivesMosaic pathogenic variants restricted to the brain are increasingly recognized as a cause of focal epilepsies. We aimed to identify a mosaic pathogenic variant and its anatomical gradient in brain DNA derived from trace tissue on explanted stereoelectroencephalography (SEEG) electrodes.MethodsWe studied a patient with nonlesional multifocal epilepsy undergoing presurgical evaluation with SEEG. After explantation, the electrodes were divided into 3 pools based on their brain location (right posterior quadrant, left posterior quadrant, hippocampus/temporal neocortex). Tissue from each pool was processed for trace DNA that was whole genome amplified prior to high-depth exome sequencing. Droplet digital PCR was performed to quantify mosaicism. A brain-specific glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) assay enabled cell-of-origin analysis.ResultsWe demonstrated a mosaic gradient for a novel pathogenicKCNT1loss-of-function variant (c.530G>A, p.W177X) predicted to lead to nonsense-mediated decay. Strikingly, the mosaic gradient correlated strongly with the SEEG findings because the highest variant allele frequency was in the right posterior quadrant, reflecting the most epileptogenic region on EEG studies. An elevated GFAP level indicated enrichment of brain-derived cells in SEEG cell suspension.DiscussionThis study demonstrates a proof of concept that mosaic gradients of pathogenic variants can be established using trace tissue from explanted SEEG electrodes.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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