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Dive into the research topics where Gaetan Lesca is active.

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Featured researches published by Gaetan Lesca.


Epilepsia | 2012

Epileptic encephalopathies of the Landau-Kleffner and continuous spike and waves during slow-wave sleep types: genomic dissection makes the link with autism.

Gaetan Lesca; Gabrielle Rudolf; Audrey Labalme; Edouard Hirsch; Alexis Arzimanoglou; Pierre Genton; Jacques Motte; Anne de Saint Martin; Maria-Paola Valenti; Clotilde Boulay; Julitta de Bellescize; Pascale Kéo-Kosal; Nadia Boutry-Kryza; Patrick Edery; Damien Sanlaville; Pierre Szepetowski

Purpose:u2002 The continuous spike and waves during slow‐wave sleep syndrome (CSWSS) and the Landau‐Kleffner (LKS) syndrome are two rare epileptic encephalopathies sharing common clinical features including seizures and regression. Both CSWSS and LKS can be associated with the electroencephalography pattern of electrical status epilepticus during slow‐wave sleep and are part of a clinical continuum that at its benign end also includes rolandic epilepsy (RE) with centrotemporal spikes. The CSWSS and LKS patients can also have behavioral manifestations that overlap the spectrum of autism disorders (ASD). An impairment of brain development and/or maturation with complex interplay between genetic predisposition and nongenetic factors has been suspected. A role for autoimmunity has been proposed but the pathophysiology of CSWSS and of LKS remains uncharacterized.


Human Mutation | 2011

Mutations and Deletions in PCDH19 Account for Various Familial or Isolated Epilepsies in Females

Christel Depienne; Oriane Trouillard; Delphine Bouteiller; Isabelle Gourfinkel-An; Karine Poirier; François Rivier; Patrick Berquin; Rima Nabbout; Denys Chaigne; Dominique Steschenko; Agnès Gautier; Dorota Hoffman-Zacharska; Annie Lannuzel; Marilyn Lackmy-Port-Lis; Hélène Maurey; Anne Dusser; Marie Bru; Brigitte Gilbert-Dussardier; Agathe Roubertie; Anna Kaminska; Sandra Whalen; Cyril Mignot; Stéphanie Baulac; Gaetan Lesca; Alexis Arzimanoglou; Eric LeGuern

Mutations in PCDH19, encoding protocadherin 19 on chromosome X, cause familial epilepsy and mental retardation limited to females or Dravet‐like syndrome. Heterozygous females are affected while hemizygous males are spared, this unusual mode of inheritance being probably due to a mechanism called cellular interference. To extend the mutational and clinical spectra associated with PCDH19, we screened 150 unrelated patients (113 females) with febrile and afebrile seizures for mutations or rearrangements in the gene. Fifteen novel point mutations were identified in 15 female patients (6 sporadic and 9 familial cases). In addition, qPCR revealed two whole gene deletions and one partial deletion in 3 sporadic female patients. Clinical features were highly variable but included almost constantly a high sensitivity to fever and clusters of brief seizures. Interestingly, cognitive functions were normal in several family members of 2 families: the familial condition in family 1 was suggestive of Generalized Epilepsy with Febrile Seizures Plus (GEFS+) whereas all three affected females had partial cryptogenic epilepsy. These results show that mutations in PCDH19 are a relatively frequent cause of epilepsy in females and should be considered even in absence of family history and/or mental retardation.


Neurology | 2012

PRRT2 links infantile convulsions and paroxysmal dyskinesia with migraine

Robin Cloarec; Nadine Bruneau; Gabrielle Rudolf; Annick Massacrier; Manal Salmi; Marc Bataillard; Clotilde Boulay; Roberto Horacio Caraballo; Natalio Fejerman; Pierre Genton; Edouard Hirsch; Alasdair G. W. Hunter; Gaetan Lesca; Jacques Motte; Agathe Roubertie; Damien Sanlaville; Sau Wei Wong; Ying-Hui Fu; Jacques Rochette; Louis J. Ptáček; Pierre Szepetowski

ABSTRACT Objective: Whole genome sequencing and the screening of 103 families recently led us to identify PRRT2 (proline-rich-transmembrane protein) as the gene causing infantile convulsions (IC) with paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia (PKD) (PKD/IC syndrome, formerly ICCA). There is interfamilial and intrafamilial variability and the patients may have IC or PKD. Association of IC with hemiplegic migraine (HM) has also been reported. In order to explore the mutational and clinical spectra, we analyzed 34 additional families with either typical PKD/IC or PKD/IC with migraine. Methods: We performed Sanger sequencing of all PRRT2 coding exons and of exon-intron boundaries in the probands and in their relatives whenever appropriate. Results: Two known and 2 novel PRRT2 mutations were detected in 18 families. The p.R217Pfs*8 recurrent mutation was found in ≈50% of typical PKD/IC, and the unreported p.R145Gfs*31 in one more typical family. PRRT2 mutations were also found in PKD/IC with migraine: p.R217Pfs*8 cosegregated with PKD associated with HM in one family, and was also detected in one IC patient having migraine with aura, in related PKD/IC familial patients having migraine without aura, and in one sporadic migraineur with abnormal MRI. Previously reported p.R240X was found in one patient with PKD with migraine without aura. The novel frameshift p.S248Afs*65 was identified in a PKD/IC family member with IC and migraine with aura. Conclusions: We extend the spectrum of PRRT2 mutations and phenotypes to HM and to other types of migraine in the context of PKD/IC, and emphasize the phenotypic pleiotropy seen in patients with PRRT2 mutations.


Journal of Medical Genetics | 2013

Breakpoint mapping by next generation sequencing reveals causative gene disruption in patients carrying apparently balanced chromosome rearrangements with intellectual deficiency and/or congenital malformations

Caroline Schluth-Bolard; Audrey Labalme; Marie-Pierre Cordier; Marianne Till; Gwenaël Nadeau; Hélène Tevissen; Gaetan Lesca; Nadia Boutry-Kryza; Sylvie Rossignol; Delphine Rocas; Estelle Dubruc; Patrick Edery; Damien Sanlaville

Background Apparently balanced chromosomal rearrangements (ABCR) are associated with an abnormal phenotype in 6% of cases. This may be due to cryptic genomic imbalances or to the disruption of genes at the breakpoint. However, breakpoint cloning using conventional methods (ie, fluorescent in situ hybridisation (FISH), Southern blot) is often laborious and time consuming. In this work, we used next generation sequencing (NGS) to locate breakpoints at the molecular level in four patients with multiple congenital abnormalities and/or intellectual deficiency (MCA/ID) who were carrying ABCR (one translocation, one complex chromosomal rearrangement and two inversions), which corresponded to nine breakpoints. Methods Genomic imbalance was previously excluded by array comparative genomic hybridisation (CGH) in all four patients. Whole genome paired-end protocol was used to identify breakpoints. The results were verified by FISH and by PCR with Sanger sequencing. Results We were able to map all nine breakpoints. NGS revealed an additional breakpoint due to a cryptic inversion at a breakpoint junction in one patient. Nine of 10 breakpoints occurred in repetitive elements and five genes were disrupted in their intronic sequence (TCF4, SHANK2, PPFIA1, RAB19, KCNQ1). Conclusions NGS is a powerful tool allowing rapid breakpoint cloning of ABCR at the molecular level. We showed that in three out of four patients, gene disruption could account for the phenotype, allowing adapted genetic counselling and stopping unnecessary investigations. We propose that patients carrying ABCR with an abnormal phenotype should be explored systematically by NGS once a genomic imbalance has been excluded by array CGH.


Orphanet Journal of Rare Diseases | 2015

Clinical profile of patients with ATP1A3 mutations in Alternating Hemiplegia of Childhood-a study of 155 patients

Eleni Panagiotakaki; Elisa De Grandis; Michela Stagnaro; Erin L. Heinzen; Carmen Fons; Sanjay M. Sisodiya; Boukje de Vries; Christophe Goubau; Sarah Weckhuysen; David Kemlink; Ingrid E. Scheffer; Gaetan Lesca; Muriel Rabilloud; Amna Klich; Alia Ramirez-Camacho; Adriana Ulate-Campos; Jaume Campistol; Melania Giannotta; Marie-Laure Moutard; Diane Doummar; Cecile Hubsch-Bonneaud; Fatima Jaffer; Helen Cross; Fiorella Gurrieri; Danilo Tiziano; Sona Nevsimalova; Sophie Nicole; Brian Neville; Arn M. J. M. van den Maagdenberg; Mohamad A. Mikati

BackgroundMutations in the gene ATP1A3 have recently been identified to be prevalent in patients with alternating hemiplegia of childhood (AHC2). Based on a large series of patients with AHC, we set out to identify the spectrum of different mutations within the ATP1A3 gene and further establish any correlation with phenotype.MethodsClinical data from an international cohort of 155 AHC patients (84 females, 71 males; between 3xa0months and 52xa0years) were gathered using a specifically formulated questionnaire and analysed relative to the mutational ATP1A3 gene data for each patient.ResultsIn total, 34 different ATP1A3 mutations were detected in 85xa0% (132/155) patients, seven of which were novel. In general, mutations were found to cluster into five different regions. The most frequent mutations included: p.Asp801Asn (43xa0%; 57/132), p.Glu815Lys (16xa0%; 22/132), and p.Gly947Arg (11xa0%; 15/132). Of these, p.Glu815Lys was associated with a severe phenotype, with more severe intellectual and motor disability. p.Asp801Asn appeared to confer a milder phenotypic expression, and p.Gly947Arg appeared to correlate with the most favourable prognosis, compared to the other two frequent mutations. Overall, the comparison of the clinical profiles suggested a gradient of severity between the three major mutations with differences in intellectual (pu2009=u20090.029) and motor (pu2009=u20090.039) disabilities being statistically significant. For patients with epilepsy, age at onset of seizures was earlier for patients with either p.Glu815Lys or p.Gly947Arg mutation, compared to those with p.Asp801Asn mutation (pu2009<u20090.001). With regards to the five mutation clusters, some clusters appeared to correlate with certain clinical phenotypes. No statistically significant clinical correlations were found between patients with and without ATP1A3 mutations.ConclusionsOur results, demonstrate a highly variable clinical phenotype in patients with AHC2 that correlates with certain mutations and possibly clusters within the ATP1A3 gene. Our description of the clinical profile of patients with the most frequent mutations and the clinical picture of those with less common mutations confirms the results from previous studies, and further expands the spectrum of genotype-phenotype correlations. Our results may be useful to confirm diagnosis and may influence decisions to ensure appropriate early medical intervention in patients with AHC. They provide a stronger basis for the constitution of more homogeneous groups to be included in clinical trials.


Human Mutation | 2014

Novel KCNQ2 and KCNQ3 Mutations in a Large Cohort of Families with Benign Neonatal Epilepsy: First Evidence for an Altered Channel Regulation by Syntaxin‐1A

Maria Virginia Soldovieri; Nadia Boutry-Kryza; Mathieu Milh; Diane Doummar; Bénédicte Héron; Emilie Bourel; Paolo Ambrosino; Francesco Miceli; Michela De Maria; Nathalie Dorison; Stéphane Auvin; Bernard Echenne; Julie Oertel; Audrey Riquet; Laetitia Lambert; Marion Gerard; Anne Roubergue; Alain Calender; Cyril Mignot; Maurizio Taglialatela; Gaetan Lesca

Mutations in the KCNQ2 and KCNQ3 genes encoding for Kv7.2 (KCNQ2; Q2) and Kv7.3 (KCNQ3; Q3) voltage‐dependent K+ channel subunits, respectively, cause neonatal epilepsies with wide phenotypic heterogeneity. In addition to benign familial neonatal epilepsy (BFNE), KCNQ2 mutations have been recently found in families with one or more family members with a severe outcome, including drug‐resistant seizures with psychomotor retardation, electroencephalogram (EEG) suppression‐burst pattern (Ohtahara syndrome), and distinct neuroradiological features, a condition that was named “KCNQ2 encephalopathy.” In the present article, we describe clinical, genetic, and functional data from 17 patients/families whose electroclinical presentation was consistent with the diagnosis of BFNE. Sixteen different heterozygous mutations were found in KCNQ2, including 10 substitutions, three insertions/deletions and three large deletions. One substitution was found in KCNQ3. Most of these mutations were novel, except for four KCNQ2 substitutions that were shown to be recurrent. Electrophysiological studies in mammalian cells revealed that homomeric or heteromeric KCNQ2 and/or KCNQ3 channels carrying mutant subunits with newly found substitutions displayed reduced current densities. In addition, we describe, for the first time, that some mutations impair channel regulation by syntaxin‐1A, highlighting a novel pathogenetic mechanism for KCNQ2‐related epilepsies.


Neurology | 2010

Severe neonatal episodic laryngospasm due to de novo SCN4A mutations: a new treatable disorder.

L. Lion-François; Cyril Mignot; S. Vicart; V. Manel; D. Sternberg; P. Landrieu; Gaetan Lesca; E. Broussolle; T. Billette de Villemeur; S. Napuri; V. des Portes; B. Fontaine

Background: Myotonia is unusual in infants, and not well-known. Methods: We describe neonatal life-threatening features of myotonia caused by de novo mutations in the muscle sodium channel gene SCN4A. Results: Three male neonates initially displayed episodic laryngospasms, with face and limb myotonia appearing later. We found SCN4A de novo mutations in these neonates: p.Gly1306Glu in 2 unrelated cases and a novel mutation p.Ala799Ser in the third. Two patients survived their respiratory attacks and were efficiently treated by sodium channel blockers (mexiletine, carbamazepine) following diagnosis of myotonia. Conclusion: Severe neonatal episodic laryngospasm is a new phenotype caused by a sodium channelopathy, which can be alleviated by channel blockers.


American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A | 2011

De novo Xq11.11 microdeletion including ARHGEF9 in a boy with mental retardation, epilepsy, macrosomia, and dysmorphic features.

Gaetan Lesca; Marianne Till; Audrey Labalme; Dominique Vallee; Catherine Hugonenq; Nicole Philip; Patrick Edery; Damien Sanlaville

We report on a novel Xq11.11 microdeletion in a patient presenting with severe mental retardation (MR), focal epilepsy, tall stature, macrocephaly, and dysmorphism. This 1.3u2009Mb deletion, identified using array CGH, includes a single gene with known function—ARHGEF9—plus 1 gene with unknown function and three putative genes. ARHGEF9 encodes collybistin (Cb) that plays an important role in the localization of gephyrin which is the key protein of the scaffolding system of inhibitory synapses and is essential for postsynaptic clustering of both GABAA and glycine receptors. Cb‐deficient male mice show reduced exploratory behavior, impaired spatial learning, increased anxiety scores, and reduction of gephyrin‐dependent GABA receptor clusters in amygdala and hippocampus. Mutations or disruption of ARHGEF9 due to chromosomal rearrangements have been found in three patients with various clinical presentations: nevertheless, all 3 presented with MR and 2 with epilepsy. The case we report on provides further evidence for the role of ARHGEF9 in cognitive development. The other phenotypic features in our patient, including macrosomia and dysmorphism, may also be related to the loss of this gene. Alternatively, they may be consequences of the loss of one or more of the other genes located within the deletion or of the disruption of sequences regulating neighboring genes. Additional case reports with identical or overlapping deletions would help in defining the phenotype associated with ARHGEF9 haploinsufficiency.


Epilepsia | 2013

Reduction of seizure frequency after epilepsy surgery in a patient with STXBP1 encephalopathy and clinical description of six novel mutation carriers

Sarah Weckhuysen; Philip Holmgren; Rik Hendrickx; Anna Jansen; Danièle Hasaerts; Charlotte Dielman; Julitta de Bellescize; Nadia Boutry-Kryza; Gaetan Lesca; Sarah von Spiczak; Ingo Helbig; Deepak Gill; Simone C. Yendle; Rikke S. Møller; Laura L. Klitten; Christian Korff; Catherine Godfraind; Kenou Van Rijckevorsel; Helle Hjalgrim; Ingrid E. Scheffer; Arvid Suls

Mutations in STXBP1 have been identified in a subset of patients with early onset epileptic encephalopathy (EE), but the full phenotypic spectrum remains to be delineated. Therefore, we screened a cohort of 160 patients with an unexplained EE, including patients with early myoclonic encephalopathy (EME), Ohtahara syndrome, West syndrome, nonsyndromic EE with onset in the first year, and Lennox‐Gastaut syndrome (LGS). We found six de novo mutations in six patients presenting as Ohtahara syndrome (2/6, 33%), West syndrome (1/65, 2%), and nonsyndromic early onset EE (3/64, 5%). No mutations were found in LGS or EME. Only two of four mutation carriers with neonatal seizures had Ohtahara syndrome. Epileptic spasms were present in five of six patients. One patient with normal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) but focal seizures underwent epilepsy surgery and seizure frequency dropped drastically. Neuropathology showed a focal cortical dysplasia type 1a. There is a need for additional neuropathologic studies to explore whether STXBP1 mutations can lead to structural brain abnormalities.


Brain | 2013

Tubacin prevents neuronal migration defects and epileptic activity caused by rat Srpx2 silencing in utero

Manal Salmi; Nadine Bruneau; Jennifer Cillario; Natalia Lozovaya; Annick Massacrier; Emmanuelle Buhler; Robin Cloarec; Timur Tsintsadze; Françoise Watrin; Vera Tsintsadze; Céline Zimmer; Claude Villard; Daniel Lafitte; Carlos Cardoso; Lan Bao; Gaetan Lesca; Gabrielle Rudolf; Françoise Muscatelli; Vanessa Pauly; Ilgam Khalilov; Pascale Durbec; Yehezkel Ben-Ari; Nail Burnashev; Alfonso Represa; Pierre Szepetowski

Altered development of the human cerebral cortex can cause severe malformations with often intractable focal epileptic seizures and may participate in common pathologies, notably epilepsy. This raises important conceptual and therapeutic issues. Two missense mutations in the sushi repeat-containing protein SRPX2 had been previously identified in epileptic disorders with or without structural developmental alteration of the speech cortex. In the present study, we aimed to decipher the precise developmental role of SRPX2, to have a better knowledge on the consequences of its mutations, and to start addressing therapeutic issues through the design of an appropriate animal model. Using an in utero Srpx2 silencing approach, we show that SRPX2 influences neuronal migration in the developing rat cerebral cortex. Wild-type, but not the mutant human SRPX2 proteins, rescued the neuronal migration phenotype caused by Srpx2 silencing in utero, and increased alpha-tubulin acetylation. Following in utero Srpx2 silencing, spontaneous epileptiform activity was recorded post-natally. The neuronal migration defects and the post-natal epileptic consequences were prevented early in embryos by maternal administration of tubulin deacetylase inhibitor tubacin. Hence epileptiform manifestations of developmental origin could be prevented in utero, using a transient and drug-based therapeutic protocol.

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Gabrielle Rudolf

French Institute of Health and Medical Research

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Mathieu Milh

Aix-Marseille University

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G. Bussy

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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