Genome-wide association study of febrile seizures implicates fever response and neuronal excitability genes

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Documents

  • Fulltext

    Final published version, 1.42 MB, PDF document

  • Line Skotte
  • João Fadista
  • Jonas Bybjerg-Grauholm
  • Vivek Appadurai
  • Michael S Hildebrand
  • Jakob Grove
  • Clara Albiñana
  • Frank Geller
  • Carmen F Bjurström
  • Bjarni J Vilhjálmsson
  • Matthew Coleman
  • John A Damiano
  • Rosemary Burgess
  • Ingrid E Scheffer
  • Christian Erikstrup
  • Kaspar René Nielsen
  • Erik Sørensen
  • Mie Topholm Bruun
  • Xueping Liu
  • Preben Bo Mortensen
  • Ole Mors
  • Julie W Dreier
  • Anders D Børglum
  • Jakob Christensen
  • David M Hougaard
  • Alfonso Buil
  • Mads Melbye
  • Henrik Ullum
  • Samuel F Berkovic
  • Bjarke Feenstra

Febrile seizures represent the most common type of pathological brain activity in young children and are influenced by genetic, environmental and developmental factors. In a minority of cases, febrile seizures precede later development of epilepsy. We conducted a genome-wide association study of febrile seizures in 7635 cases and 83 966 controls identifying and replicating seven new loci, all with P < 5 × 10-10. Variants at two loci were functionally related to altered expression of the fever response genes PTGER3 and IL10, and four other loci harboured genes (BSN, ERC2, GABRG2, HERC1) influencing neuronal excitability by regulating neurotransmitter release and binding, vesicular transport or membrane trafficking at the synapse. Four previously reported loci (SCN1A, SCN2A, ANO3 and 12q21.33) were all confirmed. Collectively, the seven novel and four previously reported loci explained 2.8% of the variance in liability to febrile seizures, and the single nucleotide polymorphism heritability based on all common autosomal single nucleotide polymorphisms was 10.8%. GABRG2, SCN1A and SCN2A are well-established epilepsy genes and, overall, we found positive genetic correlations with epilepsies (rg = 0.39, P = 1.68 × 10-4). Further, we found that higher polygenic risk scores for febrile seizures were associated with epilepsy and with history of hospital admission for febrile seizures. Finally, we found that polygenic risk of febrile seizures was lower in febrile seizure patients with neuropsychiatric disease compared to febrile seizure patients in a general population sample. In conclusion, this largest genetic investigation of febrile seizures to date implicates central fever response genes as well as genes affecting neuronal excitability, including several known epilepsy genes. Further functional and genetic studies based on these findings will provide important insights into the complex pathophysiological processes of seizures with and without fever.

Original languageEnglish
JournalBrain
Volume145
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)555–568
ISSN0006-8950
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Number of downloads are based on statistics from Google Scholar and www.ku.dk


No data available

ID: 301705778