Biallelic pathogenic variants of PARS2 cause developmental and epileptic encephalopathy with spike‐and‐wave activation in sleep

Author:

Licchetta Laura1ORCID,Di Giorgi Lucia12,Santucci Margherita3,Taruffi Lisa1,Stipa Carlotta1,Minardi Raffaella1ORCID,Carelli Valerio13,Bisulli Francesca13

Affiliation:

1. IRCCS Istituto delle Scienze Neurologiche di Bologna Full member of the European Reference Network EpiCARE Bologna Bologna Italy

2. Department of Biomedicine, Neuroscience and Advanced Diagnostics University of Palermo Palermo Italy

3. Department of Biomedical and Neuromotor Sciences University of Bologna Bologna Italy

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundBiallelic pathogenic variants in the mitochondrial prolyl‐tRNA synthetase 2 gene (PARS2, OMIM * 612036) have been associated with Developmental and Epileptic Encephalopathy‐75 (DEE‐75, MIM #618437). This condition is typically characterized by early‐onset refractory infantile spasms with hypsarrhythmia, intellectual disability, microcephaly, cerebral atrophy with hypomyelination, lactic acidemia, and cardiomyopathy. Most affected individuals do not survive beyond the age of 10 years.MethodsWe describe a patient with early‐onset DEE, consistently showing an EEG pattern of Spike‐and‐Wave Activation in Sleep (SWAS) since childhood. The patient underwent extensive clinical, metabolic and genetic investigations, including whole exome sequencing (WES).ResultsWES analysis identified compound heterozygous variants in PARS2 that have been already reported as pathogenic. A literature review of PARS2‐associated DEE, focusing mainly on the electroclinical phenotype, did not reveal the association of SWAS with pathogenic variants in PARS2.Notably, unlike previously reported cases with the same genotype, this patient had longer survival without cardiac involvement or lactic acidosis, suggesting potential genetic modifiers contributing to disease variability.ConclusionThese findings widen the genetic heterogeneity of DEE‐SWAS, including PARS2 as a causative gene in this syndromic entity, and highlight the importance of prolonged sleep EEG recording for the recognition of SWAS as a possible electroclinical evolution of PARS2‐related DEE.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology

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