(Press-News.org) Some patients with a rare type of epilepsy called epilepsy aphasia have something else in common. They have mutations in the same gene. Epilepsy aphasia disorders are characterized by seizures and speech abnormalities.
University of Washington researchers headed a recent study on genetic association. Their report, "GRIN2A mutations cause epilepsy-aphasia spectrum disorders," is published in the Aug. 11 issue of Nature Genetics.
The scientists sequenced genes in 519 patients with severe seizure disorders. Within the group, 44 patients had epilepsy aphasia and four of those -- or 10 percent -- and their affected family members had mutations in the GRIN2A gene.
"For a long time, people have debated whether this type of epilepsy had a genetic component, mostly because so few families have the disorder. To find a genetic cause is really interesting," said Gemma Carvill, senior fellow at the UW Department of Pediatrics, Division of Genetic Medicine, and the lead author of the study.
Carvill said to find 10 percent of patients with a genetic mutation for a particular epilepsy disorder "is quite sizable."
"In the families we looked at, multiple individuals were affected with epilepsy aphasia and all had a mutation in GRIN2A," she said.
Heather C. Mefford, assistant professor of pediatrics, said clinical testing for this gene could be done for individuals with epilepsy aphasia disorders who are wondering if they will pass on epilepsy to a child. In families with a mutation in GRIN2A, the risk of passing on a genetic mutation carrying the disorder is 50 percent.
Mefford said two other studies report similar findings.
Mefford said a lot of work is being done now to identify genes that cause epilepsy, Researchers know about only a small percentage of genes that, when mutated, result in epilepsy.
"The thought is there is probably a large number of genes with mutations that could cause epilepsy.
"We now have the tools to look for genetic mutations in large numbers of patients to identify the genetic cause," said Mefford.
###
UW researchers collaborated with Ingrid Scheffer and Sam Berkovic, at the Epilepsy Research Centre at the University of Melbourne, which has been collecting DNA on epilepsy patients for a long time. Other UW investigators contributing the study were Jay Shendure and Brian O'Roak from the Department of Genome Sciences, and Joe Cook, Adiba Khan and Eileen Geraghty from the Department of Pediatrcs.
The project was supported funding from the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke at the National Institutes of Health (grant 1R01NS060605, a Burroughs Wellcome Fund Career Award for Medical Research, the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, a Practitioner Fellowship, the Health Research Council of New Zealand, Agence Nationale de Recjerche, and INSERM (Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale).
Progress made in linking some forms of epilepsy to genetics
Several patients with a rare seizure and speech disorder share mutations on the same gene
2013-08-12
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Advanced technology reveals new epilepsy genes
2013-08-12
Results from a landmark international study using state of the art technology has revealed new genetic mutations that cause epilepsy. The findings could help to advance treatments for the most severe forms of epilepsy.
The global study, led by the University of Melbourne and Austin Hospital (Aus), Duke University and the University of California, San Francisco (US), used advanced gene technology known as exome sequencing to identify new genes that cause severe childhood epilepsies.
Epilepsy is a brain condition that affects an estimated 50 million people worldwide.
As ...
Mechanism underlying the ability of H3 receptor antagonist to treat brain edema
2013-08-12
Thioperamide, a selective histamine H3 receptor antagonist, can increase histamine content in the brain and improve brain edema in adult hypoxic rats. Brain edema is precisely considered as the important pathological change of neonatal hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy. As a study reported in the Neural Regeneration Research (Vol. 8, No. 19, 2013), thioperamide was used to increase histamine content in the brain, and then the mechanism of action of thioperamide during brain edema in a rat model of neonatal hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy was examined. Results showed that ...
Limb-girdle muscular dystrophy subtypes in the population of Northeast China
2013-08-12
The most common limb-girdle muscular dystrophy subtype in Italy, Spain, Turkey, Russia, Brazil and Australia is calpainopathy (limb-girdle muscular dystrophy type 2A), while dystroglycanopathy (limb-girdle muscular dystrophy type 2I) is the commonest form in Norway, Denmark and northern England. In India, sarcoglycanopthies (limb-girdle muscular dystrophy type 2C-2F) are the most preva-lent, while dysferlinopathies are the most frequent type in USA and Japan. A rigorous comparison of the morphological features of biopsy specimens between limb-girdle muscular dystrophy type ...
X-linked MeCP2 is first reported to be a new target for treating Parkinson's disease
2013-08-12
X-linked methyl-CpG binding protein 2 plays important role in the regulation of neuronal development, proliferation and maturation, and synaptic regeneration and apoptosis. Overexpression of X-linked methyl-CpG binding protein 2 in SH-SY5Y cells can reduce cell apoptosis induced by 6-hydroxydopamine and increased tyrosine hydroxylase expression. But the specific role of X-linked methyl-CpG binding protein 2 in the pathogenesis of Parkinson's disease remains unknown. Prof. Xianhou Yuan and team from Zhongnan Hospital of Wuhan University used 6-hydroxydopamine-induced human ...
Solutions for improving first aid in cardiorespiratory arrests
2013-08-12
An algorithm capable of diagnosing heart rhythm with just 3 seconds' worth of signal, and the demonstration that it is possible to come up with the diagnosis without stopping cardiac massage, constitute the types of solutions and proposals being developed by researchers in the Signal and Communications Group of the Faculty of Engineering in Bilbao (UPV/EHU-University of the Basque Country).
"We don't save lives, we just do research," as Jesús Ruiz, leader of the Signal and Communications Group, makes it clear. "But what has been confirmed is that it is cardiac massage ...
Estrogen enhancers tied to aggressive breast cancer
2013-08-12
SAN ANTONIO -- Adding to the picture of what prompts breast cancers to form, researchers from the Cancer Therapy & Research Center (CTRC) at The University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio today announced that "distant estrogen response elements" (DEREs) can act independently of oncogenes to spur tumor development.
DEREs appear to be depots or hubs that remotely and simultaneously control multiple target genes in response to estrogen stimulation, said Pei-Yin Hsu, Ph.D., lead author of the paper in Cancer Cell. As such, they are prime targets for the study of ...
Use of simple rule in children's ankle injuries reduces use of radiography by 22 percent
2013-08-12
Radiography is widely used in diagnosing ankle injuries, with 85%–95% in pediatric injuries, although only 12% of these show fractures.
"Radiography is unnecessary for most children's ankle injuries, and these high rates of radiography needlessly expose children to radiation and are a questionable use of resources," writes Dr. Kathy Boutis, a pediatric emergency department physician at the Hospital for Sick Children (SickKids) and the University of Toronto, with coauthors.
The Low Risk Ankle Rule is highly accurate at identifying fractures and can potentially reduce ...
'Dark-horse' molecule is a potential new anti-cancer target
2013-08-12
Contact: Vanessa Solomon
solomon@wehi.edu.au
61-393-452-971
Walter and Eliza Hall Institute
Rachel Steinhardt
rsteinhardt@licr.org
212-450-1582
Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research
'Dark-horse' molecule is a potential new anti-cancer target
Australian researchers have identified a molecule called interleukin-11 as a potential new target for anti-cancer therapies.
Until now, the importance of interleukin-11 in cancer development has been underestimated, but researchers have recently identified this molecule as a 'dark horse' for the development of cancer. ...
Aggressive breast cancers may be sensitive to drugs clogging their waste disposal
2013-08-12
Boston, Mass., August 12, 2013 – In a new paper in Cancer Cell, a team led by Judy Lieberman, PhD, of Boston Children's Hospital's Program in Cellular and Molecular Medicine reports "triple-negative" breast cancers may be vulnerable to drugs that attack the proteasome. This cellular structure acts as the cell's waste disposal, breaking down damaged or unneeded proteins.
These cancers, which lack the three major therapeutic markers for breast cancer—the estrogen, progesterone and HER2 receptors—are very aggressive and difficult to treat. They mostly affect younger women ...
Young or old, song sparrows experience climate change differently from each other
2013-08-12
What's good for adults is not always best for the young, and vice versa. At least that is the case with song sparrows and how they experience the effects of climate change, according to two recent studies by scientists at the University of California, Davis, and Point Blue Conservation Science.
Both studies show the importance of considering the various stages and ages of individuals in a species -- from babies to juveniles to adults -- to best predict not only how climate change could affect a species as a whole, but also why.
"To learn how climate change is expected ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Fat tissue around the heart may contribute to greater heart injury after a heart attack
Jeonbuk National University researcher proposes a proposing a two-stage decision-making framework of lithium governance in Latin America
Chromatin accessibility maps reveal how stem cells drive myelodysplastic progression
Cartilaginous cells regulate growth and blood vessel formation in bones
Plant hormone allows lifelong control of proteins in living animal for first time
Swedish freshwater bacteria give new insights into bacterial evolution
Global measures consistently underestimate food insecurity; one in five who suffer from hunger may go uncounted
Hidden patterns of isolation and segregation found in all American cities
FDA drug trials exclude a widening slice of Americans
Sea reptile’s tooth shows that mosasaurs could live in freshwater
Pure bred: New stem cell medium only has canine components
Largest study of its kind highlights benefits – and risks – of plant-based diets in children
Synergistic effects of single-crystal HfB2 nanorods: Simultaneous enhancement of mechanical properties and ablation resistance
Mysterious X-ray variability of the strongly magnetized neutron star NGC 7793 P13
The key to increasing patients’ advance care medical planning may be automatic patient outreach
Palaeontology: Ancient tooth suggests ocean predator could hunt in rivers
Polar bears may be adapting to survive warmer climates, says study
Canadian wildfire smoke worsened pediatric asthma in US Northeast: UVM study
New UBCO research challenges traditional teen suicide prevention models
Diversity language in US medical research agency grants declined 25% since 2024
Concern over growing use of AI chatbots to stave off loneliness
Biomedical authors often call a reference “recent” — even when it is decades old, analysis shows
The Lancet: New single dose oral treatment for gonorrhoea effectively combats drug-resistant infections, trial finds
Proton therapy shows survival benefit in Phase III trial for patients with head and neck cancers
Blood test reveals prognosis after cardiac arrest
UBCO study finds microdosing can temporarily improve mood, creativity
An ECOG-ACRIN imaging study solves a long-standing gap in metastatic breast cancer research and care: accurately measuring treatment response in patients with bone metastases
Cleveland Clinic presents final results of phase 1 clinical trial of preventive breast cancer vaccine study
Nationally renowned anesthesiology physician-scientist and clinical operations leader David Mintz, MD, PhD, named Chair of the Department of Anesthesiology at the UM School of Medicine
Clean water access improves child health in Mozambique, study shows
[Press-News.org] Progress made in linking some forms of epilepsy to geneticsSeveral patients with a rare seizure and speech disorder share mutations on the same gene