Leigh syndrome is a mitochondrial disease caused by pathogenic variants in over 85 genes. Whole exome sequencing of a patient with Leigh-like syndrome identified homozygous protein-truncating variants in two genes associated with Leigh syndrome; a reported pathogenic variant in PDHX (NP_003468.2:p.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: To report our institutional experience of targeted massively parallel sequencing (MPS) testing in children with epilepsy.
Method: We retrospectively analysed the yield of targeted epileptic encephalopathy (EE) panel of 71 known EE genes in patients with epilepsy of unknown cause, who underwent clinical triage by a group of neurologists prior to the testing. We compared cost of the EE panel approach compared to traditional evaluation in patients with identified pathogenic variants.
Leigh syndrome (LS) is a severe neurodegenerative disorder with characteristic bilateral lesions, typically in the brainstem and basal ganglia. It usually presents in infancy and is genetically heterogeneous, but most individuals with mitochondrial complex IV (or cytochrome c oxidase) deficiency have mutations in the biogenesis factor SURF1. We studied eight complex IV-deficient LS individuals from six families of Lebanese origin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMutations in the polymerase γ (POLG) gene are among the most common causes of mitochondrial disease and more than 160 POLG mutations have been reported. However, a large proportion of patients suspected of having POLG mutations only have one (heterozygous) definitive pathogenic mutation identified. Using oligonucleotide array CGH, we identified a compound heterozygous large intragenic deletion encompassing exons 15-21 of this gene in a child with Alpers syndrome due to mtDNA depletion.
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