Sporadic hypothalamic hamartoma is a ciliopathy with somatic and bi-allelic contributions
Journal Title
Human Molecular Genetics
Publication Type
epub ahead of print
Abstract
Hypothalamic hamartoma with gelastic seizures is a well-established cause of drug-resistant epilepsy in early life. The development of novel surgical techniques has permitted the genomic interrogation of hypothalamic hamartoma tissue. This has revealed causative mosaic variants within GLI3, OFD1, and other key regulators of the sonic-hedgehog pathway in a minority of cases. Sonic-hedgehog signalling proteins localise to the cellular organelle primary cilia. We therefore explored the hypothesis that cilia gene variants may underlie hitherto unsolved cases of sporadic hypothalamic hamartoma. We performed high depth exome sequencing and chromosomal microarray on surgically resected hypothalamic hamartoma tissue and paired leukocyte-derived DNA from 27 patients. We searched for both germline and somatic variants under both dominant and bi-allelic genetic models. In hamartoma-derived DNA of seven patients we identified bi-allelic (one germline, one somatic) variants within one of four cilia genes-DYNC2I1, DYNC2H1, IFT140 or SMO. In eight patients we identified single somatic variants in the previously established hypothalamic hamartoma disease genes GLI3 or OFD1. Overall, we established a plausible molecular cause for 15/27 (56%) patients. Here we expand the genetic architecture beyond single variants within dominant disease genes that cause sporadic hypothalamic hamartoma to bi-allelic (one germline/one somatic) variants, implicate three novel cilia genes, and re-conceptualize the disorder as a ciliopathy.
Research Division(s)
Population Health And Immunity
PubMed ID
35137044/
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


Creation Date: 2022-02-18 11:34:21
Last Modified: 2022-02-18 03:11:53
An error has occurred. This application may no longer respond until reloaded. Reload 🗙