Largest-ever genetic study of epilepsy finds possible therapeutic targets

Scientists have uncovered new genetic links to different types of epilepsy, which could lead to more tailored treatments.

Graphic of EEG readout against blue background with DNA base letters
Credit: Ricardo Job-Reese, ӳý Communications

The largest and most diverse study to date of epilepsy’s genetic factors has revealed new potential targets for treatment, both shared by and unique to different subtypes of epilepsy. The findings point to factors involved in how neurons communicate and fire, suggesting potential targets for new therapies. In the future, the results could also help doctors tailor treatments to a patient’s genome.

Epilepsy is one of the most common neurological disorders. Scientists have long known that genetics play a major role in epilepsy risk, but identifying all of the specific genetic contributions has been challenging, and previous studies have focused on just one or a few genes at a time. Epilepsy also has several subtypes, and while one group called developmental encephalopathies have been connected to several genes, other forms of the disease are less well understood.

The study, published in , comes from the , a group of over 200 researchers around the world working to uncover the genetic basis of epilepsy. It builds on previous work by the group using ever-larger cohorts of participants, now up to more than 54,000 people — nearly double previous studies. The researchers — led by Benjamin Neale, co-director of the Stanley Center for Psychiatric Research at the ӳý of MIT and Harvard and a core faculty member of the Analytic and Translational Genetics Unit at Massachusetts General Hospital, and Samuel Berkovic, a professor of medicine at the University of Melbourne — used an approach called whole exome sequencing to look at every gene in the protein-coding region of the genome.

“For a complex and heterogeneous disorder like epilepsy, we really wanted to survey as comprehensive a sample as possible across a wide range of genetic variation,” said first author Siwei Chen, a postdoctoral scholar in Neale’s lab. 

Ultra-rare variants

Since 2014, Epi25 has collected information from patients with multiple types of epilepsy, including a severe group of epilepsies known as developmental and epileptic encephalopathies  as well as more common and milder forms called genetic generalized epilepsy and non-acquired focal epilepsy (NAFE). To find genes that strongly contribute to these subtypes, the authors searched the participants’ exomes for “ultra-rare” variants, or URVs — mutations found less than once per 10,000 participants. If these variants are found more often in people with epilepsy than in those without, or in one type of epilepsy than another, they are more likely to play a role in disease.

Since URVs are so rare, and because the scientists wanted to understand many different types of epilepsy, the researchers analyzed DNA from people across the world with a range of different genetic ancestries to find meaningful signals. The study’s 54,000 participants included about 21,000 patients with epilepsy and 33,000 controls.

The exomes revealed connections between disease risk and several genes involved in the transmission of signals across the synapses between neurons. In particular, genes coding for ion channel protein complexes, such as receptors for the neurotransmitter GABAA, play a major role in epilepsy risk across subtypes. While this trend was present for all subtypes, the specific variants contributing to mutations in ion channel proteins varied when looking at each subtype individually.

To improve their ability to focus on specific cellular pathways, the researchers aggregated data from genes with similar functions or that encode parts of the same protein complex. For example, data from patients with NAFE showed a strong signal for the gene DEPDC5, which encodes a part of a protein complex called GATOR1 that is critical to brain cell function. When combining it in their analysis with the two genes that encode the rest of the GATOR1 complex, the signal became even stronger, indicating that GATOR1 may be highly involved in a mechanism that contributes to NAFE.

In the future, the results could help doctors tailor treatment strategies based on a patient’s genotype, or stratify patients based on the biological effects of specific variants. The researchers say the findings could also improve genetic testing for epilepsy and provide a clearer sense of how genetic variation leads to disease.

"These genetic insights provide data-driven starting points for unraveling the biology of the epilepsies," said Neale, "which in turn should help spur future, subtype-tailored advances in diagnosis and treatment."

Summary-level data from the study are available via , an interactive browser hosted by the ӳý, allowing clinicians to easily look up variants seen in their patients and facilitating clinical and translational efforts in follow-up studies.

Funding

Support for this study was provided by the National Human Genome Research Institute, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, and other sources.

Paper cited

Epi25 Collaborative. . Nature Neuroscience. Online October 3, 2024. DOI 10.1038/s41593-024-01747-8.