- Myers, Candace T;
- Stong, Nicholas;
- Mountier, Emily I;
- Helbig, Katherine L;
- Freytag, Saskia;
- Sullivan, Joseph E;
- Ben Zeev, Bruria;
- Nissenkorn, Andreea;
- Tzadok, Michal;
- Heimer, Gali;
- Shinde, Deepali N;
- Rezazadeh, Arezoo;
- Regan, Brigid M;
- Oliver, Karen L;
- Ernst, Michelle E;
- Lippa, Natalie C;
- Mulhern, Maureen S;
- Ren, Zhong;
- Poduri, Annapurna;
- Andrade, Danielle M;
- Bird, Lynne M;
- Bahlo, Melanie;
- Berkovic, Samuel F;
- Lowenstein, Daniel H;
- Scheffer, Ingrid E;
- Sadleir, Lynette G;
- Goldstein, David B;
- Mefford, Heather C;
- Heinzen, Erin L
Exome sequencing has readily enabled the discovery of the genetic mutations responsible for a wide range of diseases. This success has been particularly remarkable in the severe epilepsies and other neurodevelopmental diseases for which rare, often de novo, mutations play a significant role in disease risk. Despite significant progress, the high genetic heterogeneity of these disorders often requires large sample sizes to identify a critical mass of individuals with disease-causing mutations in a single gene. By pooling genetic findings across multiple studies, we have identified six individuals with severe developmental delay (6/6), refractory seizures (5/6), and similar dysmorphic features (3/6), each harboring a de novo mutation in PPP3CA. PPP3CA encodes the alpha isoform of a subunit of calcineurin. Calcineurin encodes a calcium- and calmodulin-dependent serine/threonine protein phosphatase that plays a role in a wide range of biological processes, including being a key regulator of synaptic vesicle recycling at nerve terminals. Five individuals with de novo PPP3CA mutations were identified among 4,760 trio probands with neurodevelopmental diseases; this is highly unlikely to occur by chance (p = 1.2 × 10-8) given the size and mutability of the gene. Additionally, a sixth individual with a de novo mutation in PPP3CA was connected to this study through GeneMatcher. Based on these findings, we securely implicate PPP3CA in early-onset refractory epilepsy and further support the emerging role for synaptic dysregulation in epilepsy.