Whole‐exome sequencing of a Saudi epilepsy cohort reveals association signals in known and potentially novel loci

Author:

Al Anazi Abdulrahman H.,Ammar Ahmed S.,Al-Hajj Mahmoud,Cyrus Cyril,Aljaafari Danah,Khoda Iname,Abdelfatah Ahmed K.,Alsulaiman Abdullah A.,Alanazi Firas,Alanazi Rawan,Gandla Divya,Lad Hetal,Barayan Samar,Keating Brendan J.,Al-Ali Amein K.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Epilepsy, a serious chronic neurological condition effecting up to 100 million people globally, has clear genetic underpinnings including common and rare variants. In Saudi Arabia, the prevalence of epilepsy is high and caused mainly by perinatal and genetic factors. No whole-exome sequencing (WES) studies have been performed to date in Saudi Arabian epilepsy cohorts. This offers a unique opportunity for the discovery of rare genetic variants impacting this disease as there is a high rate of consanguinity among large tribal pedigrees. Results We performed WES on 144 individuals diagnosed with epilepsy, to interrogate known epilepsy-related genes for known and functional novel variants. We also used an American College of Medical Genetics (ACMG) guideline-based variant prioritization approach in an attempt to discover putative causative variants. We identified 32 potentially causative pathogenic variants across 30 different genes in 44/144 (30%) of these Saudi epilepsy individuals. We also identified 232 variants of unknown significance (VUS) across 101 different genes in 133/144 (92%) subjects. Strong enrichment of variants of likely pathogenicity was observed in previously described epilepsy-associated loci, and a number of putative pathogenic variants in novel loci are also observed. Conclusion Several putative pathogenic variants in known epilepsy-related loci were identified for the first time in our population, in addition to several potential new loci which may be prioritized for further investigation.

Funder

King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Drug Discovery,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Molecular Medicine

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