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  3. Genome-wide identification and phenotypic characterization of seizure-associated copy number variations in 741,075 individuals.
 

Genome-wide identification and phenotypic characterization of seizure-associated copy number variations in 741,075 individuals.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/189664
Date of Publication
July 20, 2023
Publication Type
Article
Contributor
Montanucci, Ludovica
Lewis-Smith, David
Collins, Ryan L
Niestroj, Lisa-Marie
Parthasarathy, Shridhar
Xian, Julie
Ganesan, Shiva
Macnee, Marie
Brünger, Tobias
Thomas, Rhys H
Talkowski, Michael
Helbig, Ingo
Leu, Costin
Lal, Dennis
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Nature Communications
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2041-1723
Publisher
Springer Nature
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1038/s41467-023-39539-6
PubMed ID
37474567
Description
Copy number variants (CNV) are established risk factors for neurodevelopmental disorders with seizures or epilepsy. With the hypothesis that seizure disorders share genetic risk factors, we pooled CNV data from 10,590 individuals with seizure disorders, 16,109 individuals with clinically validated epilepsy, and 492,324 population controls and identified 25 genome-wide significant loci, 22 of which are novel for seizure disorders, such as deletions at 1p36.33, 1q44, 2p21-p16.3, 3q29, 8p23.3-p23.2, 9p24.3, 10q26.3, 15q11.2, 15q12-q13.1, 16p12.2, 17q21.31, duplications at 2q13, 9q34.3, 16p13.3, 17q12, 19p13.3, 20q13.33, and reciprocal CNVs at 16p11.2, and 22q11.21. Using genetic data from additional 248,751 individuals with 23 neuropsychiatric phenotypes, we explored the pleiotropy of these 25 loci. Finally, in a subset of individuals with epilepsy and detailed clinical data available, we performed phenome-wide association analyses between individual CNVs and clinical annotations categorized through the Human Phenotype Ontology (HPO). For six CNVs, we identified 19 significant associations with specific HPO terms and generated, for all CNVs, phenotype signatures across 17 clinical categories relevant for epileptologists. This is the most comprehensive investigation of CNVs in epilepsy and related seizure disorders, with potential implications for clinical practice.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/171884
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s41467-023-39539-6.pdftextAdobe PDF1.68 MBpublishedOpen
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