Multidimensional Genetic Analysis of Repeated Seizures in the Hybrid Mouse Diversity Panel Reveals a Novel Epileptogenesis Susceptibility Locus

Epilepsy has many causes and comorbidities affecting as many as 4% of people in their lifetime. Both idiopathic and symptomatic epilepsies are highly heritable, but genetic factors are difficult to characterize among humans due to complex disease etiologies. Rodent genetic studies have been critical...

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Published inG3 : genes - genomes - genetics Vol. 7; no. 8; pp. 2545 - 2558
Main Authors Ferland, Russell J, Smith, Jason, Papandrea, Dominick, Gracias, Jessica, Hains, Leah, Kadiyala, Sridhar B, O'Brien, Brittany, Kang, Eun Yong, Beyer, Barbara S, Herron, Bruce J
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Genetics Society of America 01.08.2017
Oxford University Press
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Summary:Epilepsy has many causes and comorbidities affecting as many as 4% of people in their lifetime. Both idiopathic and symptomatic epilepsies are highly heritable, but genetic factors are difficult to characterize among humans due to complex disease etiologies. Rodent genetic studies have been critical to the discovery of seizure susceptibility loci, including mutations identified in both mouse and human cohorts. However, genetic analyses of epilepsy phenotypes in mice to date have been carried out as acute studies in seizure-naive animals or in Mendelian models of epilepsy, while humans with epilepsy have a history of recurrent seizures that also modify brain physiology. We have applied a repeated seizure model to a genetic reference population, following seizure susceptibility over a 36-d period. Initial differences in generalized seizure threshold among the Hybrid Mouse Diversity Panel (HMDP) were associated with a well-characterized seizure susceptibility locus found in mice: Remarkably, influence diminished as subsequent induced seizures had diminishing latencies in certain HMDP strains. Administration of eight seizures, followed by an incubation period and an induced retest seizure, revealed novel associations within the calmodulin-binding transcription activator 1, Using systems genetics, we have identified four candidate genes that are differentially expressed between seizure-sensitive and -resistant strains close to our novel ( ) locus that may act individually or as a coordinated response to the neuronal stress of seizures.
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ISSN:2160-1836
2160-1836
DOI:10.1534/g3.117.042234