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Clinical and genetic study of Tunisian families with genetic generalized epilepsy: contribution of CACNA1H and MAST4 genes
Authors:Zied Landoulsi  Fatma Laatar  Eric Noé  Saloua Mrabet  Mouna Ben Djebara  Guillaume Achaz  Caroline Nava  Stéphanie Baulac  Imen Kacem  Amina Gargouri-Berrechid  Riadh Gouider  Eric Leguern
Affiliation:1.Department of Neurology, UR12SP21,Razi Hospital,Manouba,Tunisia;2.UPMC Univ Paris 06, Inserm, CNRS, APHP, Institut du Cerveau et la Moelle (ICM), H?pital Pitié-Salpêtrière,Sorbonne Universités,Paris,France;3.Faculty of Medicine of Tunis,University of Tunis El Manar,Tunis,Tunisia;4.Institut de Systématique, Evolution, Biodiversité, ISYEB, UMR 7205,CNRS MNHN UPMC EPHE,Paris,France;5.Centre Interdisciplinaire de Recherche en Biologie, CIRB, UMR 7241,CNRS Collège de France INSERM,Paris,France;6.Département de Génétique,AP-HP Groupe Hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtrière,Paris,France
Abstract:Genetic generalized epilepsies (GGE) (childhood absence epilepsy (CAE), juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) and epilepsy with generalized tonic-clonic seizures (GTCS)) are mainly determined by genetic factors. Since few mutations were identified in rare families with autosomal dominant GGE, a polygenic inheritance was suspected in most patients. Recent studies on large American or European cohorts of sporadic cases showed that susceptibility genes were numerous although their variants were rare, making their identification difficult. Here, we reported clinical and genetic characteristics of 30 Tunisian GGE families, including 71 GGE patients. The phenotype was close to that in sporadic cases. Nineteen pedigrees had a homogeneous type of GGE (JME-CAE-CGTS), and 11 combined these epileptic syndromes. Rare non-synonymous variants were selected in probands using a targeted panel of 30 candidate genes and their segregation was determined in families. Molecular studies incriminated different genes, mainly CACNA1H and MAST4. The segregation of at least two variants in different genes in some pedigrees was compatible with the hypothesis of an oligogenic inheritance, which was in accordance with the relatively low frequency of consanguineous probands. Since at least 2 susceptibility genes were likely shared by different populations, genetic factors involved in the majority of Tunisian GGE families remain to be discovered. Their identification should be easier in families with a homogeneous type of GGE, in which an intra-familial genetic homogeneity could be suspected.
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