Analysis of 1386 epileptogenic brain lesions reveals association with DYRK1A and EGFR.

Nature communications
Authors
Abstract

Lesional focal epilepsy (LFE) is a common and severe seizure disorder caused by epileptogenic lesions, including malformations of cortical development (MCD) and low-grade epilepsy-associated tumors (LEAT). Understanding the genetic etiology of these lesions can inform medical and surgical treatment. We conducted a somatic variant enrichment mega-analysis in brain tissue from 1386 individuals who underwent epilepsy surgery, including 599 previously unpublished individuals with ultra-deep ( > 1600x) targeted panel sequencing. Here we confirm four known associations (BRAF, SLC35A2, MTOR, PTPN11), support eight associations without prior statistical support (FGFR1, PIK3CA, AKT3, NF1, PTEN, RHEB, KRAS, NRAS), and identify novel associations for two genes, DYRK1A and EGFR. Both novel genes show specific histopathological phenotypes, interact with LFE genes and pathways, and may represent promising candidates as biomarkers and potentially druggable targets.

Year of Publication
2024
Journal
Nature communications
Volume
15
Issue
1
Pages
10429
Date Published
11/2024
ISSN
2041-1723
DOI
10.1038/s41467-024-54911-w
PubMed ID
39616148
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