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Variants Associated with Febrile Seizures

Overview
Journal Biomolecules
Publisher MDPI
Date 2023 Mar 29
PMID 36979350
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Abstract

Febrile seizures (FS) are the most common form of epilepsy in children between six months and five years of age. FS is a self-limited type of fever-related seizure. However, complicated prolonged FS can lead to complex partial epilepsy. We found that among the GABA receptor subunit () genes, most variants associated with FS are harbored in the γ2 subunit (). Here, we characterized the effects of eight variants in the GABA receptor γ2 subunit on receptor biogenesis and channel function. Two-thirds of the variants followed the expected autosomal dominant inheritance in FS and occurred as missense and nonsense variants. The remaining one-third appeared as de novo in the affected probands and occurred only as missense variants. The loss of GABA receptor function and dominant negative effect on GABA receptor biogenesis likely caused the FS phenotype. In general, variants in the result in a broad spectrum of phenotypic severity, ranging from asymptomatic, FS, genetic epilepsy with febrile seizures plus (GEFS+), and Dravet syndrome individuals. The data presented here support the link between FS, epilepsy, and variants, shedding light on the relationship between the variant topological occurrence and disease severity.

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