Abstract
Familial epilepsy with auditory features (FEAF), previously known as autosomal-dominant lateral temporal lobe epilepsy (ADLTE) is a genetically heterogeneous syndrome, clinically characterized by focal seizures with prominent auditory symptoms. It is inherited with autosomal-dominant pattern with reduced penetrance (about 70%). Sporadic epilepsy with auditory features cases are more frequent and clinically indistinguishable from familial cases. One causal gene, MICAL-1, encodes MICAL-1, an intracellular multi-domain enzyme that is an important regulator of filamentous actin (F-actin) structures. Pathogenic variants in MICAL-1 account for approximately 7% of FEAF families. Here, we describe a de novo MICAL-1 pathogenic variant, p.Arg915Cys, in a sporadic case, an affected 21-year-old Italian man with no family history of epilepsy. Genetic testing was performed in the patient and his parents, using a next-generation sequencing panel. In cell-based assay, this variant significantly increased MICAL-1 oxidoreductase activity, which likely resulted in dysregulation of F-actin organization. This finding provides further support for a gain-of-function effect underlying MICAL-1-mediated epilepsy pathogenesis, as previously seen with other pathogenic variants. Furthermore, the case study provides evidence that de novo MICAL-1 pathogenic variants can occur in sporadic cases with epilepsy with auditory feature (EAF). PLAIN LANGUAGE SUMMARY: In this study, we report a new MICAL-1 pathogenic variant in a patient without family history for epilepsy, not inherited from his parents. MICAL-1 is a protein with enzymatic activity that reorganizes the structure of the cell. We proved the pathological effect of this variant by testing its enzymatic activity and found an increase of this activity. This result suggests that non-familial cases should be tested to find novel pathogenic variants in this gene.
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