Brain somatic mutations in MTOR cause focal cortical dysplasia type II leading to intractable epilepsy
Author(s) -
Jae Seok Lim,
Woo Il Kim,
Hoon Chul Kang,
Se Hoon Kim,
Ah Hyung Park,
Eun Kyung Park,
Young Wook Cho,
Sang Woo Kim,
Ho Min Kim,
JeongA Kim,
Junho Kim,
Hwanseok Rhee,
Seung Won Kang,
Heung Dong Kim,
Daesoo Kim,
Do Kyung Kim,
Jehee Lee
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
nature medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 19.536
H-Index - 547
eISSN - 1546-170X
pISSN - 1078-8956
DOI - 10.1038/nm.3824
Subject(s) - cortical dysplasia , somatic cell , pi3k/akt/mtor pathway , missense mutation , biology , deep sequencing , germline mutation , epilepsy , mutation , cancer research , neuroscience , genetics , gene , signal transduction , genome
Focal cortical dysplasia type II (FCDII) is a sporadic developmental malformation of the cerebral cortex characterized by dysmorphic neurons, dyslamination and medically refractory epilepsy. It has been hypothesized that FCD is caused by somatic mutations in affected regions. Here, we used deep whole-exome sequencing (read depth, 412-668×) validated by site-specific amplicon sequencing (100-347,499×) in paired brain-blood DNA from four subjects with FCDII and uncovered a de novo brain somatic mutation, mechanistic target of rapamycin (MTOR) c.7280T>C (p.Leu2427Pro) in two subjects. Deep sequencing of the MTOR gene in an additional 73 subjects with FCDII using hybrid capture and PCR amplicon sequencing identified eight different somatic missense mutations found in multiple brain tissue samples of ten subjects. The identified mutations accounted for 15.6% of all subjects with FCDII studied (12 of 77). The identified mutations induced the hyperactivation of mTOR kinase. Focal cortical expression of mutant MTOR by in utero electroporation in mice was sufficient to disrupt neuronal migration and cause spontaneous seizures and cytomegalic neurons. Inhibition of mTOR with rapamycin suppressed cytomegalic neurons and epileptic seizures. This study provides, to our knowledge, the first evidence that brain somatic activating mutations in MTOR cause FCD and identifies mTOR as a treatment target for intractable epilepsy in FCD.
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