作者
Leanne M. Dibbens,Boukje de Vries,Simona Donatello,Sarah E. Heron,Bree Hodgson,Satyan Chintawar,Douglas E. Crompton,James N. Hughes,Susannah T. Bellows,Karl Martin Klein,Petra M.C. Callenbach,Mark Corbett,Alison Gardner,Sara Kivity,Xenia Iona,Brigid M. Regan,Claudia M Weller,Denis Crimmins,Terence J. O’Brien,Rosa Guerrero,John C. Mulley,François Dubeau,Laura Licchetta,Francesca Bisulli,Patrick Cossette,Paul Q. Thomas,Jozef Gécz,José M. Serratosa,Oebele F. Brouwer,Frédérick Andermann,Eva Andermann,Arn M. J. M. van den Maagdenberg,Massimo Pandolfo,Samuel F. Berkovic,Ingrid E. Scheffer
摘要
The majority of epilepsies are focal in origin, with seizures emanating from one brain region. Although focal epilepsies often arise from structural brain lesions, many affected individuals have normal brain imaging. The etiology is unknown in the majority of individuals, although genetic factors are increasingly recognized. Autosomal dominant familial focal epilepsy with variable foci (FFEVF) is notable because family members have seizures originating from different cortical regions. Using exome sequencing, we detected DEPDC5 mutations in two affected families. We subsequently identified mutations in five of six additional published large families with FFEVF. Study of families with focal epilepsy that were too small for conventional clinical diagnosis with FFEVF identified DEPDC5 mutations in approximately 12% of families (10/82). This high frequency establishes DEPDC5 mutations as a common cause of familial focal epilepsies. Shared homology with G protein signaling molecules and localization in human neurons suggest a role of DEPDC5 in neuronal signal transduction.