Abstract

Missense and truncating variants in protocadherin 19 (PCDH19) cause PCDH19-related epilepsy. In this study, we aimed to investigate variations in distributional characteristics and the clinical implications of variant type in PCDH19-related epilepsy. We comprehensively collected PCDH19 missense and truncating variants from the literature and by sequencing six exons and intron–exon boundaries of PCDH19 in our cohort. We investigated the distribution of each type of variant using the cumulative distribution function and tested for associations between variant types and phenotypes. The distribution of missense variants in patients was clearly different from that of healthy individuals and was uniform throughout the extracellular cadherin (EC) domain, which consisted of six highly conserved domains. Truncating variants showed two types of distributions: (1) located from EC domain 1 to EC domain 4, and (2) located from EC domain 5 to the cytoplasmic domain. Furthermore, we also found that later onset seizures and milder intellectual disability occurred in patients with truncating variants located from EC domain 5 to the cytoplasmic domain compared with those of patients with other variants. Our findings provide the first evidence of two types of truncating variants in the PCDH19 gene with regard to distribution and the resulting clinical phenotype.

Highlights

  • Protocadherin 19 (PCDH19)-related epilepsy is an epileptic syndrome with various characteristics

  • By analyzing the variant distribution using the cumulative distribution function (CDF), we found that truncating variants in the PCDH19 gene could be separated into two types: (1) located from EC domain 1 (EC1) to EC4 and

  • “moderate/severe” level was counted as 0.5 cases of moderate level and 0.5 cases of severe level together, these results suggested that the intellectual disability level of patients with truncating variants located from EC5 to the cytoplasmic domain was separated from those of patients with other variant types

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Summary

Introduction

Protocadherin 19 (PCDH19)-related epilepsy is an epileptic syndrome with various characteristics. Early-onset seizures (6–36 months), which are the most typical characteristic, can be focal, generalized, tonic–clonic, myoclonic, atonic, or absent and often occur in clusters or as prolonged ictal episodes; their severity and frequency vary among affected females, resembling the seizures observed in patients with. Dravet syndrome [1,2,3,4,5,6].

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