Department of Medicine, Epilepsy Research Centre, University of Melbourne, Austin Health, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Population Health and Immunity Division, The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
Epilepsia. 2023 May;64(5):1368-1375. doi: 10.1111/epi.17547. Epub 2023 Mar 9.
"How many epilepsy genes are there?" is a frequently asked question. We sought to (1) provide a curated list of genes that cause monogenic epilepsies, and (2) compare and contrast epilepsy gene panels from multiple sources.
We compared genes included on the epilepsy panels (as of July 29, 2022) of four clinical diagnostic providers: Invitae, GeneDx, Fulgent Genetics, and Blueprint Genetics; and two research resources: PanelApp Australia and ClinGen. A master list of all unique genes was supplemented by additional genes identified via PubMed searches up until August 15, 2022, using the search terms "genetics" AND/OR "epilepsy" AND/OR "seizures". Evidence supporting a monogenic role for all genes was manually reviewed; those with limited or disputed evidence were excluded. All genes were annotated according to inheritance pattern and broad epilepsy phenotype.
The comparison of genes included on epilepsy clinical panels revealed high heterogeneity in both number of genes (range: 144-511) and content. Just 111 genes (15.5%) were included on all four clinical panels. Subsequent manual curation of all "epilepsy genes" identified >900 monogenic etiologies. Almost 90% of genes were associated with developmental and epileptic encephalopathies. By comparison only 5% of genes were associated with monogenic causes of "common epilepsies" (i.e., generalized and focal epilepsy syndromes). Autosomal recessive genes were most frequent (56% of genes); however, this varied according to the associated epilepsy phenotype(s). Genes associated with common epilepsy syndromes were more likely to be dominantly inherited and associated with multiple epilepsy types.
Our curated list of monogenic epilepsy genes is publicly available: github.com/bahlolab/genes4epilepsy and will be regularly updated. This gene resource can be utilized to target genes beyond those included on clinical gene panels, for gene enrichment methods and candidate gene prioritization. We invite ongoing feedback and contributions from the scientific community via genes4-epilepsy@unimelb.edu.au.
“有多少种癫痫基因?”是一个常见的问题。我们试图:(1) 提供一个经过精心整理的导致单基因癫痫的基因列表,以及 (2) 比较和对比来自多个来源的癫痫基因面板。
我们比较了四个临床诊断提供商(截至 2022 年 7 月 29 日)的癫痫基因面板(即 Invitae、GeneDx、Fulgent Genetics 和 Blueprint Genetics)和两个研究资源(PanelApp Australia 和 ClinGen)中包含的基因。使用“遗传学”和/或“癫痫”和/或“癫痫发作”等搜索词,通过 PubMed 搜索直到 2022 年 8 月 15 日,补充了所有独特基因的主列表,以此确定了额外的基因。所有基因的单基因作用证据都经过手动审查;那些证据有限或有争议的基因被排除在外。所有基因都根据遗传模式和广泛的癫痫表型进行注释。
对癫痫临床基因面板中包含的基因进行比较,发现基因数量(范围:144-511)和内容存在高度异质性。只有 111 个基因(15.5%)被四个临床面板全部包含。随后对所有“癫痫基因”进行手动整理,确定了>900 种单基因病因。近 90%的基因与发育性和癫痫性脑病有关。相比之下,只有 5%的基因与“常见癫痫”的单基因病因有关(即全身性和局灶性癫痫综合征)。常染色体隐性基因最常见(56%的基因);然而,这因相关的癫痫表型而异。与常见癫痫综合征相关的基因更可能是显性遗传的,并与多种癫痫类型相关。
我们精心整理的单基因癫痫基因列表是公开的:github.com/bahlolab/genes4epilepsy,并将定期更新。这个基因资源可以用于针对临床基因面板之外的基因,用于基因富集方法和候选基因优先级。我们邀请科学界通过 genes4-epilepsy@unimelb.edu.au 提供持续的反馈和贡献。