Article Text
Abstract
Background BSN gene encodes Bassoon, an essential protein to assemble the cytomatrix at the active zone of neurotransmitter release. This study aims to explore the relationship between BSN variants and epilepsy.
Methods Whole-exome sequencing was performed in a cohort of 313 cases (trios) with epilepsies of unknown causes. Additional cases with BSN variants were collected from China Epilepsy Gene V.1.0 Matching Platform. The Clinical Validity Framework of ClinGen was used to evaluate the relationship between BSN variants and epilepsy.
Results Four pairs of compound heterozygous variants and one cosegregating heterozygous missense variant in BSN were identified in five unrelated families. These variants presented statistically higher frequency in the case cohort than in controls. Additional two de novo heterozygous nonsense variants and one cosegregating heterozygous missense variant were identified in three unrelated cases from the gene matching platform, which were not present in the Genome Aggregation Database. The missense variants tended to be located in C-terminus, including the two monoallelic missense variants. Protein modelling showed that at least one missense variant in each pair of compound heterozygous variants had hydrogen bond alterations. Clinically, two cases were diagnosed as idiopathic generalised epilepsy, two as focal epilepsy and the remaining four as epilepsy with febrile seizures plus. Seven out of eight probands showed infancy or childhood-onset epilepsy. Eight out of 10 affected individuals had a history of febrile convulsions. All the cases were seizure-free. The cases with monoallelic variants achieved seizure-free without treatment or under monotherapy, while cases with biallelic missense variants mostly required combined therapy. The evidence from ClinGen Framework suggested an association between BSN variants and epilepsy.
Conclusion The BSN gene was potentially a novel candidate gene for epilepsy. The phenotypical severity was associated with the genotypes and the molecular subregional effects of the variants.
- epilepsy
- genetic variation
- mutation
Data availability statement
Data may be obtained from a third party and are not publicly available. The data that support the findings of this study are available on request from the corresponding author. The data are not publicly available due to privacy or ethical restrictions.
This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.
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WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN ON THIS TOPIC
Bassoon protein encoded by BSN gene plays a vital role in releasing synaptic vesicles. The relationship between BSN variants and human diseases remains unknown.
WHAT THIS STUDY ADDS
Four pairs of compound heterozygous variants, two de novo heterozygous nonsense variants and two heterozygous missense variants with cosegregation were identified in eight patients with epilepsies with favourable outcome. The pathogenic missense variants tended to gather at the C-terminus of Bassoon.
HOW THIS STUDY MIGHT AFFECT RESEARCH, PRACTICE OR POLICY
The BSN gene is potentially a novel candidate gene for epilepsy. Its phenotypical severity was associated with the genotypes and the molecular subregional effects of missense variants.
Introduction
Epilepsy is a common neurological disorder featured by the recurrence of unprovoked seizures. The aetiology of epilepsy is classified into genetic, structural, infectious, immunological, metabolic and unknown aetiologies.1 Genetic causes account for 70%–80% of epilepsy cases,2 with more than 977 genes being related to epilepsy.3 Recently, dozens of new causative genes for epilepsy have been identified, such as PGM3,4 CHD4,5 UNC13B,6 CELSR3,7 RHOBTB2 8 and SYNGAP1.9 However, the causative genes in the majority of patients still remain unknown.10
The BSN gene (OMIM* 604020), located on 3q21.31, encodes the Bassoon protein, which is highly expressed in the mammalian brain, especially in the cerebral cortex and the hippocampus. Bassoon is involved in synaptic vesicles trafficking and establishing the cytomatrix at the active zone (CAZ).11–14 It plays a vital role in maintaining synapse integrity,15 participating in the formation of Piccolo-Bassoon transport vesicles (PTVs)16 and regulating the activity at both inhibitory and excitatory glutamatergic synapses in the cortex and hippocampus.17 Mice of homozygous BSN null led to spontaneous seizures and partial premature lethality.17 18 However, the relationship between BSN variants and human diseases remains unknown.
In this study, trio-based whole-exome sequencing (WES) was performed in a cohort of 313 cases with epilepsies of unknown causes. Novel BSN variants were identified in five cases. These variants presented at a statistically higher frequency in the case cohort than in controls. Three additional variants without allelic frequency in Genome Aggregation Database (gnomAD) were identified in three cases coming from different epilepsy centres. This study suggested that BSN was potentially a candidate gene of epilepsy.
Materials and methods
Subjects
A total of 313 cases of epilepsy with unknown causes were recruited from the Epilepsy Centre of the Second Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University in China from 2018 to 2020. Patients with acquired aetiologies, such as tumour, trauma, infection, immunity and stroke, were excluded. Clinical information of the affected individuals was collected, including age of onset, seizure type and frequency, family history, general and neurological examination results, and response to antiepileptic drugs. Brain MRI scans were performed to detect structural abnormalities. Long-term video EEG monitoring records that included open–close eyes test, hyperventilation, intermittent photic stimulation and sleeping recording were obtained according to the EEG technical guideline.19 The EEG results were reviewed by two qualified electroencephalographers. Epileptic seizures and epilepsy syndromes were diagnosed according to the criteria of the Commission on Classification and Terminology of the International League Against Epilepsy (1981, 1989, 2001, 2010, 2017 and 2022). All of the subjects were followed up to at least 1 year.
WES and bioinformatic analyses
Blood samples were obtained from the probands and their parents and other family members, if available. The genomic DNAs were extracted by using Qiagen Flexi Gene DNA kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany). WES was performed with NextSeq2000 sequencing instruments (Illumina, San Diego, California, USA). Sequence alignment and variant calling were performed according to standard procedures as previously described.4 5 20 The potentially disease-causing variants were analysed with an individualised protocol. Included variants in this study should meet the following criteria: (1) minor allele frequencies of <0.005 according to gnomAD in the general population or East Asian population; (2) the total minor allele frequency of biallelic variants of compound heterozygotes is <10−7. The variants in each trio were sorted according to the following five models: (1) epilepsy-associated gene model; (2) de novo variant dominant model; (3) autosomal recessive inheritance model, including homozygous and compound heterozygous variants; (4) X-linked model; and (5) cosegregation analysis model. To identify novel epilepsy-associated genes, the known epilepsy-associated genes were put aside.3 Genes with de novo variants, biallelic variants, hemizygous variants or variants with segregations, which represented the genetic difference between the patients and normal individuals in a family and potentially explained the occurrence of disease, were selected for further studies to define the gene–disease association. The BSN gene emerged as one of the candidate genes with recurrent compound heterozygous variants and variants with segregations in this cohort. All candidate pathogenic variants were validated by Sanger sequencing. The variants in the BSN gene were annotated based on the transcript NM_003458.3. Multiple web-based in silico programs were used to evaluate the damaging effect of candidate variants in the BSN gene.
Validation of BSN variants in epilepsy
To verify the correlation between BSN variants and epilepsy, additional cases with epilepsy and BSN variants were collected from China Epilepsy Gene V.1.0 Matching Platform. All cases with epilepsy had neither acquired causes nor pathogenic variants in known epilepsy-associated genes.3
Protein modelling and stability
To evaluate the pathogenicity of candidate variants, in silico modelling of Bassoon was conducted by phyre2 Protein Fold Recognition Server (http://www.sbg.bio.ic.ac.uk/phyre2/). As Bassoon is a large protein with 3926 amino acids, the target protein was divided into three parts for analysis. PyMOL (https://www.pymol.org) was used for visualising the crystal structure and introducing amino acid changes caused by the variants. The I-Mutant V.3.0 (http://gpcr.biocomp.unibo.it/cgi/predictors/I-Mutant3.0/I-Mutant3.0.cgi) was used to predict the effect of the variants on the stability of the protein structure.
Statistical analysis
The data were processed by R statistical software V.3.4.1. The comparison in frequency of variants between the case cohort and controls was conducted by Fisher’s exact method. The burden of recessive variants was analysed according to the method recommended by Martin et al.21 A p value of <0.05 was regarded as statistical significance.
Evaluating the BSN gene as a novel candidate epilepsy gene
The Clinical Validity Framework developed by Clinical Genome Resource (ClinGen) was used to evaluate BSN as a novel candidate epilepsy gene from both genetic and experimental aspects.22
Results
Identification and analysis of BSN variants
Nine novel variants in BSN were identified in five unrelated cases (cases 1–5) from the Epilepsy Centre of the Second Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University, including four pairs of compound heterozygous variants (c.418C>T/p.Arg140Trp, c.10817C>G/p.Ser3606Cys; c.1473G>C/p.Gln491His, c.8464G>A/p.Val2822Met; c.3196C>T/p.Arg1066Cys, c.10573G>T/p.Gly3525Trp; and c.4359-4361del/p.Leu1454del, c.10925C>T/p.Ala3642Val) and one heterozygous missense variant with cosegregation (c.10559C>T/p.Pro3520Leu) (figure 1A,B). The nine variants were present at low or no allele frequencies in all populations or East Asian populations. There was statistical difference between the frequencies in the cohort of epilepsy and that in the populations in gnomAD (9/626 vs 40/221 818 in all populations of gnomAD, p=1.943×10−14; vs 9/16 050 in the East Asian population of gnomAD, p=5.02×10−9; vs 19/87 760 in controls of gnomAD-all populations, p=2.595×10−13; vs 4/8344 in controls of gnomAD-East Asian populations of gnomAD, p=2. 06×10−8). None of them was discovered in the homozygotes of all population according to gnomAD (table 1). When the burden of recessive variants was analysed, the BSN variants in the present cohort were significantly more than the expected number by chance in the East Asian population (minor allele frequency from gnomAD (MAF) <0.005, p=2.316×105).
Three additional novel BSN variants were identified in three unrelated cases (cases 6–8) from the China Epilepsy Gene V.1.0 Matching Platform, including two de novo nonsense variants (c.3322G>T/p.Glu1108Ter and c.7351C>T/p.Gln2451Ter) and one missense heterozygous variant with cosegregation (c.10972A>T/p.Thr3658Ser) (figure 1A,B). The three variants have not been recorded in gnomAD.
All the probands did not carry any other pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant in the genes known to be associated with epilepsy.3
Clinical features of the cases with BSN variants
In total, BSN variants were identified in eight cases involving 10 affected individuals. All probands showed infancy or childhood-onset epilepsy (the onset age ranging from 10 months old to 3 years old), with the exception in case 1 who started seizures at early adolescence. Eight out of 10 affected individuals had a history of febrile convulsions. All the cases but case 4 had normal development. The brain MRI in all the cases was normal. The representative EEG is shown in figure 2. Their clinical features are summarised in table 2.
Two probands (cases 1 and 5) were diagnosed as idiopathic generalised epilepsy, two (cases 2 and 4) as partial/focal epilepsy and the remaining four probands (cases 3 and 6–8) as epilepsy with febrile seizures plus. Additionally, the parents of cases 5 and 6 carrying BSN variants had febrile seizures.
All the cases were seizure-free. Among the four cases with monoallelic variants (cases 5–8), case 7 with p.Glu1108Ter was seizure-free without treatment, while the other three cases (cases 5, 6 and 8) were seizure-free with monotherapy. Among the four cases with biallelic variants (cases 1–4), one case (case 3) achieved seizure-free status with monotherapy, while three cases (cases 1, 2 and 4) were seizure-free with combined therapy. Case 4 with the deletion variant (p.Leu1454del) and the missense variant in C-terminus (p.Ala3642Val) presented frequent seizures and developmental delay (he could not sit alone and speak at early childhood). He was microcephalic with an occipitofrontal head circumference of 44.5 cm (−3.3 SD) at early childhood. He was finally seizure-free under the combination of levetiracetam, lamotrigine and valproate.
Consequence of BSN variants and the genotype–phenotype correlation
Bassoon is constituted of 3926 amino acids, including two zinc finger motifs in the N-terminal region, three coiled-coil domains in the central part and a stretch of polyglutamines at its C-terminus.23
The two nonsense variants (c.3322G>T/p.Glu1108Ter and c.7351C>T/p.Gln2451Ter) were located close to the first and second coiled-coil domains, respectively (figure 3). They both occurred in exon 5 (of the 12 exons), were predicted to result in truncation of Bassoon protein and trigger nonsense-mediated decay.24 They were de novo and produced clinical symptoms by monoallelic variants. The probability of being loss-of-function intolerant (pLI) of BSN gene is 1.0; the loss-of-function observed/expected upper bound fraction (LOEUF) is 0.11 (0.07–0.17); and the probability of haploinsufficiency (pHI) is 0.819,25 indicating loss of function and haploinsufficiency of BSN are potentially pathogenic.
As shown in figure 3A, four missense variants (p.Arg140Trp, p.Gln491His, p.Arg1066Cys and p.Val2822Met) scattered in different domains of Bassoon protein, while five missense variants (p.Pro3520Leu, p.Gly3525Trp, p.Ser3606Cys, p.Ala3642Val and p.Thr3658Ser), including the two monoallelic variants, were clustered in the C-terminus, potentially suggesting the functional particularity of C-terminus.
The analysis of crystal structures of Bassoon protein by PyMol showed that six out of the nine missense variants led to hydrogen bond alterations with surrounding residues (figure 3B). Among the four pairs of compound heterozygous variants, at least one variant in each pair had hydrogen bond alterations. Case 4 had the compound heterozygous variant constituted by an in-frame deletion variant (p.Leu1454del) and a missense variant (p.Ala3642Val) located in the C-terminus with hydrogen bond alterations. The patient presented frequent seizures, neurodevelopmental delay and microcephalus.
Evaluation of epilepsy as a novel phenotype of BSN variants
To evaluate the correlation between BSN gene and epilepsy, the assessment was performed based on the framework developed by the National Institutes of Health-funded ClinGen.22 There were two different aspects of this framework involved: genetic and experimental, having scores of 6.4 and 6.0, respectively. Gene–disease relationship scores for these two aspects were 12.4, which was ranked as ‘strong’, suggesting that the BSN gene was closely associated with epilepsy (table 3).
Discussion
The BSN gene, also referred to as ZNF231, is the presence of 12 coding exons spreading over 350 kb of genomic DNA. BSN gene encodes Bassoon, which is highly expressed in the cerebral cortex and the hippocampus during infant stage. Bassoon is one of assembling proteins to form the presynaptic cytoskeleton at vesicular release sites—CAZ. CAZ is a meshwork of cytoskeleton underlying the plasma membrane and is composed by multiple proteins, including Bassoon, Piccolo, Munc13 proteins, RIMs and CAST.26 Previous studies indicated that loss of function of Munc13-1 caused cortical hyperexcitability by leaving syntaxin in a non-functional closed state.27 Our previous study showed that deficiency of the Munc13-2 protein was associated with partial epilepsy.6 These findings suggested that CAZ proteins were associated with epilepsy. Experimentally, Bassoon was required for normal recruitment of P/Q-type of voltage-gated calcium channel and regulation of neurotransmitter release.13 In animal models, BSN −/− mutant mice developed pronounced seizures.18 Recently, a genome-wide association study implicated one BSN intronic variant (rs1191743) with febrile seizures,28 indicating the BSN variants of low MAF were potentially associated with seizure susceptibility. In this study, BSN variants were identified in eight cases with epilepsy. Further assessment of the ClinGen Clinical Validity Framework confirmed an association between BSN variants and epilepsy.
The pLI, LOEUF and pHI of the BSN gene indicated loss of function and haploinsufficiency were potentially pathogenic.22 29 Experimentally, the absence of Bassoon led to the inactivation of a significant fraction of glutamatergic synapse which induced a reduction in normal synaptic transmission and resulted in vesicles being clustered and docked in normal numbers but unable to fuse.18 In BSN−/− mutant mice, interictal spikes were recorded in the cortex and hippocampus. Phenotypically, BSN −/− mutant mice exhibited spontaneous epileptic seizures, even died from seizures, suggesting a pathogenic role of BSN loss of function. In the present study, both truncating variants and compound heterozygous variants were identified in the patients with epilepsy. The truncating variants resulted in a loss of function by yielding a premature termination of the protein. Among the compound heterozygous variants, at least one variant in each pair of biallelic variants led to the alterations of hydrogen bonds with surrounding amino acids or the changes of protein length, implying functional damages of Bassoon. Thus, loss of function of Bassoon was potentially the underlying mechanism of the pathogenicity of BSN variants, which is consistent with the pathogenesis of other genes encoding CAZ proteins, such as UNC13A 27 and UNC13B.6 However, the functional effects of the BSN variants warrant further investigation.
In animals, the heterozygous BSN knockout mice model showed no phenotype, while the homozygous knockout mice showed abnormal central nervous system synaptic transmission and seizures, even preweaning lethality. Clinically, the patients with monoallelic BSN missense variants achieved seizure-free status without treatment or under monotherapy, while the majority of patients with biallelic missense variants required combined therapy, and case 4 with the deletion variant (p.Leu1454del) and the missense variant (p.Ala3642Val) located in the C-terminus with hydrogen bond alterations even presented developmental abnormalities, indicating a correlation between genotype and phenotype severity. Considering homozygous BSN knockout mice displaying preweaning lethality, it is possible that biallelic null variants in human were fatal. Therefore, the epileptic phenotype spectrum of BSN variants potentially ranged from benign epilepsy caused by monoallelic missense variants in the mild extreme to severe epilepsy with neurodevelopmental delay (even fatal epilepsy) associated with biallelic variants of severe damage in the other extreme.
The pathogenic missense variants tended to gather at the C-terminus of Bassoon; especially the two monoallelic missense variants (p.Pro3520Leu and p.Thr3658Ser) were also located in the C-terminus, indicating a subregional effect. Physiologically, Bassoon deposits at synapses, fuses with the presynaptic plasma membrane by exocytotic of the transport vesicle, then directly places the C-terminus close to CAZ. In the process, the C-terminus of Bassoon is attached to equivalent membranes (Golgi membranes and subsequently to the PTV membrane) all along the trafficking route.11 30 The damages of the C-terminus may directly affect docking, fusing and trafficking of synaptic vesicles, explaining the potentially severe pathogenicity of the missense variants in the C-terminus.
Among the 4657 disease-causing genes in humans (OMIM, www.omim.org), 539 genes (11.6%) were associated with genetic disorders in both dominant and recessive inheritance patterns. The coexistence of dominant and recessive inheritance mode is common in the epilepsy-related genes, such as SLC12A5, RELN, EFHC1, CPA6, KCNMA1 and SCN1B. In the present study, the truncating variants were of de novo and the two missense variants located in the C-terminus were cosegregating in the families, while the other missense variants were inherited in recessive inheritance pattern, indicating the correlation between BSN genotypes and inheritance.
It is worth noting that all of the cases were finally seizure-free, although case 4 presented frequent seizures initially. Seizures in the majority of cases started before 3 years old and remitted at the adolescence stages. BSN was significantly highly expressed in infant stage and reduced in adolescence and adult.31 The consistence between temporal pattern of gene expression and occurrence of seizures potentially implies clinical significance in evaluation of the course and outcome of epilepsy.
In conclusion, this study suggested that the BSN gene was potentially a candidate gene of epilepsy with favourable outcome. The phenotypical severity of BSN variants was associated with their genotypes, such as missense or destructive mutations, monoallelic or biallelic mutations, and the molecular subregional effects of missense variants.
Data availability statement
Data may be obtained from a third party and are not publicly available. The data that support the findings of this study are available on request from the corresponding author. The data are not publicly available due to privacy or ethical restrictions.
Ethics statements
Patient consent for publication
Ethics approval
This study involves human participants and was approved by the ethics committee of the Second Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University (approval ethics number 2020-hs-49). Written informed consents were obtained from the individuals or legal guardians. The studies adhered to the guidelines of the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors with regard to patient consent for research or participation.
Acknowledgments
The authors are deeply grateful to the patients and clinicians who participated in this work.
References
Footnotes
TY and JZ contributed equally.
Correction notice This article has been corrected since it was published Online first. In the 'Subjects' section, 'from 2012 to 2020' has been corrected to 'from 2018 to 2020'.
Contributors TY and JZ: statistical analysis, data interpretation, and drafting of the figures, tables and manuscript. JW: data collection, data interpretation and data analysis support. SL: clinical data collection and analysis. TZ, HW, XH and B-ML: clinical data collection and analysis. WD: EEG information collection. W-PL and X-RL: conception and design, data collection and interpretation, initial critical review, manuscript revision and approval. X-RL had the full responsibility for the work and/or the conduct of the study, had access to the data, and controlled the decision to publish. X-RL acts as guarantor.
Funding This work was funded by grants from the National Natural Science Foundation of China (grant number 81871015), the Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province (grant number 2020A1515010108), the Science and Technology Project of Guangzhou (grant numbers 201904020028 and 202201020106), the Key Realm R&D Program of Guangdong Province (2019B030335001), the Multi-center Clinical Research Fund Project of the Second Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University (2020-LCYJ-DZX-03 and 2021-LCYJ-DZX-02) and the Scientific Research Project of Guangzhou Education Bureau (grant number 202235395).The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish or preparation of the manuscript.
Competing interests None declared.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.