PLoS Genetics (Apr 2018)

Global characterization of copy number variants in epilepsy patients from whole genome sequencing.

  • Jean Monlong,
  • Simon L Girard,
  • Caroline Meloche,
  • Maxime Cadieux-Dion,
  • Danielle M Andrade,
  • Ron G Lafreniere,
  • Micheline Gravel,
  • Dan Spiegelman,
  • Alexandre Dionne-Laporte,
  • Cyrus Boelman,
  • Fadi F Hamdan,
  • Jacques L Michaud,
  • Guy Rouleau,
  • Berge A Minassian,
  • Guillaume Bourque,
  • Patrick Cossette

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1007285
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 4
p. e1007285

Abstract

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Epilepsy will affect nearly 3% of people at some point during their lifetime. Previous copy number variants (CNVs) studies of epilepsy have used array-based technology and were restricted to the detection of large or exonic events. In contrast, whole-genome sequencing (WGS) has the potential to more comprehensively profile CNVs but existing analytic methods suffer from limited accuracy. We show that this is in part due to the non-uniformity of read coverage, even after intra-sample normalization. To improve on this, we developed PopSV, an algorithm that uses multiple samples to control for technical variation and enables the robust detection of CNVs. Using WGS and PopSV, we performed a comprehensive characterization of CNVs in 198 individuals affected with epilepsy and 301 controls. For both large and small variants, we found an enrichment of rare exonic events in epilepsy patients, especially in genes with predicted loss-of-function intolerance. Notably, this genome-wide survey also revealed an enrichment of rare non-coding CNVs near previously known epilepsy genes. This enrichment was strongest for non-coding CNVs located within 100 Kbp of an epilepsy gene and in regions associated with changes in the gene expression, such as expression QTLs or DNase I hypersensitive sites. Finally, we report on 21 potentially damaging events that could be associated with known or new candidate epilepsy genes. Our results suggest that comprehensive sequence-based profiling of CNVs could help explain a larger fraction of epilepsy cases.