Progress in Mapping Human Epilepsy Genes

Autor: Manyee N. Gee, Marco T. Medina, Karen Weissbecker, Amy Liu, Lucy J. Treiman, Robert S. Sparkes, José M. Serratosa, Antonio V. Delgado-Escueta
Rok vydání: 1994
Předmět:
Zdroj: Epilepsia. 35:S29-S40
ISSN: 1528-1167
0013-9580
Popis: Summary: The chromosomal loci for seven epilepsy genes have been identified in chromosomes lq, 6p, 8q, 16p, 20q, 21q, and 22q. In 1987, the first epilepsy locus was mapped in a common benign idiopathic generalized epilepsy syndrome, juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME). Properdin factor or Bf, human leukocyte antigen (HLA), and DNA markers in the HLA-DQ region were genetically linked to JME and the locus, named EJM1, was assigned to the short arm of chromosome 6. Our latest studies, as well as those by White-house et al., show that not all families with JME have their genetic locus in chromosome 6p, and that childhood absence epilepsy does not map to the same EJM1 locus. Recent results, therefore, favor genetic heterogeneity for JME and for the common idiopathic generalized epilepsies. Heterogeneity also exists in benign familial neonatal convulsions, a rare form of idiopathic generalized epilepsy. Two loci are now recognized; one in chromosome 20q (EBN1) and another in chromosome 8q. Heterogeneity also exists for the broad group of debilitating and often fatal progressive myoclonus epilepsies (PME). The gene locus (EPMI) for both the Baltic and Mediterranean types of PME or Unverricht-Lundborg disease is the same and is located in the long arm of chromosome 21. Lafora type of PME does not map to the same EPMI locus in chromosome 21. PME can be caused by the juvenile type of Gaucher's disease, which maps to chromosome lq, by the juvenile type of neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (CLN3), which maps to chromosome 16p, and by the “cherry-red-spot-myoclonus” syndrome of Guazzi or sialidosis type I, which has been localized to chromosome 10. A point mutation in the mitochondrial tRNALys coding gene can also cause PME in children and adults (MERFF).
Databáze: OpenAIRE