Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Background: Epileptic encephalopathies are a group of childhood epilepsies that display high phenotypic and genetic heterogeneity. The recent, extensive use of next-generation sequencing has identified a large number of genes in epileptic encephalopathies, including UBA5 in which biallelic mutations were first described as pathogenic in 2016 (Colin E et al., Am J Hum Genet 99(3):695-703, 2016. Muona M et al., Am J Hum Genet 99(3):683-694, 2016). UBA5 encodes an activating enzyme for a post-translational modification mechanism known as ufmylation, and is the first gene from the ufmylation pathway that is linked to disease.

Case Presentation: We sequenced the genomes of two sisters with early-onset epileptic encephalopathy along with their unaffected parents in an attempt to find a genetic cause for their condition. The sisters, born in 2004 and 2006, presented with infantile spasms at six months of age, which later progressed to recurrent, treatment-resistant seizures. We detected a compound heterozygous genotype in UBA5 in the sisters, a genotype not seen elsewhere in an Icelandic reference set of 30,067 individuals nor in public databases. One of the mutations, c.684G > A, is a paternally inherited exonic splicing mutation, occuring at the last nucleotide of exon 7 of UBA5. The mutation is predicted to disrupt the splice site, resulting in loss-of-function of one allele of UBA5. The second mutation is a maternally inherited missense mutation, p.Ala371Thr, previously reported as pathogenic when in compound heterozygosity with a loss-of-function mutation in UBA5 and is believed to produce a hypomorphic allele. Supportive of this, we have identified three adult Icelanders homozygous for the p.Ala371Thr mutation who show no signs of neurological disease.

Conclusions: We describe compound heterozygous mutations in the UBA5 gene in two sisters with early-onset epileptic encephalopathy. To our knowledge, this is the first description of mutations in UBA5 since the initial discovery that pathogenic biallelic variants in the gene cause early-onset epileptic encephalopathy. We further provide confirmatory evidence that p.Ala371Thr is a hypomorphic mutation, by presenting three adult homozygotes who show no signs of neurological disease.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5623963PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12881-017-0466-8DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

early-onset epileptic
16
epileptic encephalopathy
16
compound heterozygous
12
mutations uba5
12
uba5
9
heterozygous mutations
8
epileptic encephalopathies
8
hum genet
8
sisters early-onset
8
three adult
8

Similar Publications

UBA5-epileptic encephalopathy: new patient, a novel variant, and a review of epileptic phenotypes.

Epileptic Disord

September 2025

Unit of Child Neurology and Psychiatry, ASST-Spedali Civili of Brescia, Brescia, Italy.

Protein ufymilation is a post-translational modification implicated in the regulation of several cellular processes. Biallelic variants in UBA5 causing a functional alteration of its protein product have been associated with early-onset epileptic encephalopathy 44 (EIEE44), a rare disease for which 28 patients have been described in the literature at present. We here report on the clinical and detailed EEG phenotype of a novel patient affected by EIEE44.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

An iPSC line (FINi102-A) carrying a heterozygous R950Q variant in KCNT1 from a boy with early-onset epilepsy.

Stem Cell Res

September 2025

The Florey, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC, Australia; Praxis Precision Medicines, Cambridge, MA, USA. Electronic address:

The KCNT1 gene, affected in early-onset epilepsies, encodes a T-type sodium-activated potassium channel, K1.1, involved in membrane post-firing re-hyperpolarisation in various neuronal cell types. Fibroblasts from a boy with early-onset epilepsy carrying a heterozygous missense (R950Q) KCNT1 variant were reprogrammed using Sendai virus.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Clinical profile of early-onset Alzheimer's disease in Peru: case series from a neurological care center.

Rev Peru Med Exp Salud Publica

August 2025

Centro Básico de Investigación en Demencias y Enfermedades Desmielinizantes del Sistema Nervioso, Instituto Nacional de Ciencias Neurológicas, Lima, Perú.

Background: Motivation for the study. To describe the clinical characteristics of early-onset Alzheimer's disease (EOAD) and compare them according to gender. This condition is considered a rare disease, whose manifestations are still poorly understood.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We report the first known case of a 9-year-old male with early-onset epilepsy, syncope, and ictal asystole-requiring pacemaker implantation at the age of seven-associated with a pathogenic variant in FGF12.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Megalencephalic leukoencephalopathy with subcortical cysts (MLC) is a rare leukodystrophy characterized by early-onset macrocephaly, white matter edema, seizures, and motor and cognitive decline. Missense mutations to hepatic and glial cell adhesion molecule (hepaCAM), also known as GlialCAM, are responsible for approximately twenty-five percent of MLC cases. HepaCAM is highly enriched in astrocytes and plays important roles in astrocyte territory establishment, gap junction coupling, branching organization, synaptic function, and development of the gliovascular unit.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF