4.5 Article

CDKL5 deficiency causes epileptic seizures independent of cellular mosaicism

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 443, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jns.2022.120498

Keywords

CDKL5 deficiency disorder; Digital PCR; Epileptic encephalopathy; Mosaicism; Mosaic variants

Funding

  1. Japan Epilepsy Research Foundation [JERF TENKAN 21006]
  2. Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare of Japan Research on Rare and Intractable Diseases [20FC1002, 22FC1002]
  3. Loulou foundation/University of Pennsylvania's Orphan Disease Center, CDKL5 Program of Excellence PILOT GRANT PROGRAM [CDKL5-19-10101]

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This study examines the impact of genetic variants on the clinical phenotype of patients with CDKL5 deficiency disorder (CDD) and finds that cellular mosaicism is associated with lesser severity of comorbidities, but not necessarily required for developing epilepsy.
Objective: In a study using a mouse model of CDKL5 deficiency disorder (CDD), seizures are specific to female mice heterozygous for Cdkl5 mutations and not observed in hemizygous knockout males or homozygous knockout females. The aim of this study was to examine whether the clinical phenotype of patients with CDD can be impacted by the type of genetic variant. Methods: Eleven CDD patients (six females and five males) were included in this study. The molecular diagnosis of hemizygous male patients was performed using digital PCR and their clinical phenotypes were compared with those of patients with mosaic or heterozygous CDKL5 variants. The severity of clinical phenotypes was graded by using CDKL5 Developmental Score and the adapted version of the CDKL5 Clinical Severity Assessment. The effect of cellular mosaicism on the severity of CDD was studied by comparing the clinical characteristics and comorbidities between individuals with hemizygous and mosaic or heterozygous CDKL5 variants. Results: One of the five male patients was mosaic for the CDKL5 variant. All patients developed seizures irrespective of their genetic status of the pathogenic variant. However, cellular mosaicism of CDKL5 deficiency was associated with lesser severity of other comorbidities such as feeding, respiratory, and visual functional impairments. Significance: This study provided evidence that cellular mosaicism of CDKL5 deficiency was not necessarily required for developing epilepsy. CDD patients not only exhibited clinical features of epilepsy but also exhibited the developmental consequences arising directly from the effect of the CDKL5 pathogenic variant.

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