Abstract

The genetic diagnosis of patients with seizure disorders has been improved significantly by the development of affordable next-generation sequencing technologies. Indeed, in the last 20 years, dozens of causative genes and thousands of associated variants have been described and, for many patients, are now considered responsible for their disease. However, the functional consequences of these mutations are often not studied in vivo, despite such studies being central to understanding pathogenic mechanisms and identifying novel therapeutic avenues. One main roadblock to functionally characterizing pathogenic mutations is generating and characterizing in vivo mammalian models carrying clinically relevant variants in specific genes identified in patients. Although the emergence of new mutagenesis techniques facilitates the production of rodent mutants, the fact that early development occurs internally hampers the investigation of gene function during neurodevelopment. In this context, functional genomics studies using simple animal models such as flies or fish are advantageous since they open a dynamic window of investigation throughout embryonic development. In this review, we will summarize how the use of simple animal models can fill the gap between genetic diagnosis and functional and phenotypic correlates of gene function in vivo. In particular, we will discuss how these simple animals offer the possibility to study gene function at multiple scales, from molecular function (i.e., ion channel activity), to cellular circuit and brain network dynamics. As a result, simple model systems offer alternative avenues of investigation to model aspects of the disease phenotype not currently possible in rodents, which can help to unravel the pathogenic substratum in vivo.

Highlights

  • The genetic diagnosis of patients with seizure disorders has been improved significantly by the development of affordable next-generation sequencing technologies

  • Beginning with transformative studies of people living with autistic spectrum disorders (ASD) (Sebat et al, 2007; Pinto et al, 2010), we have come to understand that individually rare copy number variations (CNVs) account for a significant proportion of the incidence of autism, but intellectual disability (Cooper et al, 2011), “idiopathic” generalized epilepsies (Mefford et al, 2010; Addis et al, 2016) and schizophrenia (Stefansson et al, 2008; Marshall et al, 2017), where there is overlap between these conditions

  • Genes identified from genome-wide association studies of particular disorders often overlap across disorder categories (Fromer et al, 2014; International League Against Epilepsy Consortium on Complex Epilepsies, 2014; Schizophrenia Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, 2014; Turner et al, 2017), suggesting that many of the genes have a broad neurodevelopmental role that may result in a range of recognizable syndromes or phenotypes

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Summary

Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience

Received: 20 September 2019 Accepted: 02 December 2019 Published: 13 December 2019. Citation: Rosch R, Burrows DRW, Jones LB, Peters CH, Ruben P and Samarut É (2019) Functional Genomics of Epilepsy and Associated Neurodevelopmental Disorders Using Simple Animal Models: From Genes, Molecules to Brain Networks. One main roadblock to functionally characterizing pathogenic mutations is generating and characterizing in vivo mammalian models carrying clinically relevant variants in specific genes identified in patients. The emergence of new mutagenesis techniques facilitates the production of rodent mutants, the fact that early development occurs internally hampers the investigation of gene function during neurodevelopment. In this context, functional genomics studies using simple animal models such as flies or fish are advantageous since they open a dynamic window of investigation throughout embryonic development. Simple model systems offer alternative avenues of investigation to model aspects of the disease phenotype not currently possible in rodents, which can help to unravel the pathogenic substratum in vivo

The Use of Simple Models for Neurodevelopmental Disorders
Severe de novo Mutations and Genomic Alterations in Neurodevelopmental Disorders
Findings
CONCLUSION
Full Text
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