A longer polyalanine expansion mutation in the ARX gene causes early infantile epileptic encephalopathy with suppression-burst pattern (Ohtahara syndrome).
Specific mutations in at least four genes (whose protein products are essential in lower brain's neuronal and interneuronal functions, including mitochondrial respiratory chains have been identified in unrelated individuals with EIEE and include: (a) the ARX (aristaless-related) homeobox gene at Xp22.13 (EIEE-1 variant); (b) the CDKL5 (SYK9) gene at Xp22 (EIEE-2 variant); (c) the SLC25A22 (GC1) gene at 11p15.5 (EIEE-3 variant); and (d) the Stxbp1 (MUNC18-1) gene at 9q34-1 (EIEE-4 variant).
ARX mutation testing should be undertaken in children aged less than 1 year with Ohtahara syndrome and a movement disorder, and in infants with unexplained neurodegeneration, progressive white matter loss, and cortical atrophy.
Early infantile epileptic encephalopathy (EIEE1; OMIM #308350) is the earliest of these age-dependent encephalopathies, manifesting as tonic spasms, myoclonic seizures, or partial seizures, with severely abnormal electroencephalogram, often showing a suppression-burst pattern.
Mutations in the Aristaless-related homeobox gene (ARX) have been recognized as a cause of X-linked infantile spasms and sporadic cryptogenic infantile spasms.
Mutations in the ARX gene have been found in X-linked infantile spasms syndrome, Partington syndrome (mental retardation with dystonic movements of the hands), X-linked lissencephaly with abnormal genitalia, X-linked myoclonus epilepsy with spasticity and intellectual disability, and in nonsyndromic X-linked mental retardation.
Reviewing records of patients with ARX mutations, infantile epilepsies, and psychomotor retardation, we analyzed a family harboring a novel ARX mutation with different phenotypes in males and females, including Ohtahara syndrome.
This disorder is allelic with X-linked infantile spasms (ISSX; MIM 308350) where polyalanine tract expansions are the commonly observed molecular defect.
The most frequent ARX mutation found to date in patients with X-linked infantile spasms, Partington syndrome or X-linked mental retardation, is a duplication of 24 bp in exon 2, resulting in the expansion of the second polyA tract.
We report a 2 year-old boy with a background history of Ohtahara syndrome due to a missense variant in ARX (the aristaless-related homeobox gene) who subsequently developed status dystonicus.
Functional characterization of the D188V mutation in neuronal voltage-gated sodium channel causing generalized epilepsy with febrile seizures plus (GEFS).
Recently, PCDH19-related EIEE turned out to be more frequent than initially thought, contributing to around 16% of cases (25% in female groups) in the SCN1A-negative DS-like patients.