Erin Heinzen

Erin Heinzen

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

H-index: 51

North America-United States

About Erin Heinzen

Erin Heinzen, With an exceptional h-index of 51 and a recent h-index of 38 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, specializes in the field of neuropsychiatric disease genomics.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

LUSTR: a new customizable tool for calling genome-wide germline and somatic short tandem repeat variants

RNA methyltransferase SPOUT1/CENP-32 links mitotic spindle organization with the neurodevelopmental disorder SpADMiSS

Somatic variants as a cause of drug‐resistant epilepsy including mesial temporal lobe epilepsy with hippocampal sclerosis

The role of copy number variants in the genetic architecture of common familial epilepsies

Exome sequencing of ATP1A3-negative cases of alternating hemiplegia of childhood reveals SCN2A as a novel causative gene

Brain mosaicism of hedgehog signalling and other cilia genes in hypothalamic hamartoma

Loss of Slc35a2 alters development of the mouse cerebral cortex

Contribution of somatic Ras/Raf/mitogen-activated protein kinase variants in the hippocampus in drug-resistant mesial temporal lobe epilepsy

Erin Heinzen Information

University

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Position

Associate Professor, UNC Eshelman School of Pharmacy

Citations(all)

17686

Citations(since 2020)

6790

Cited By

13991

hIndex(all)

51

hIndex(since 2020)

38

i10Index(all)

89

i10Index(since 2020)

79

Email

University Profile Page

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Erin Heinzen Skills & Research Interests

neuropsychiatric disease genomics

Top articles of Erin Heinzen

LUSTR: a new customizable tool for calling genome-wide germline and somatic short tandem repeat variants

Authors

Jinfeng Lu,Camilo Toro,David R Adams,Cristiane Araujo Martins Moreno,Wan-Ping Lee,Yuk Yee Leung,Mathew B Harms,Badri Vardarajan,Erin L Heinzen

Journal

BMC genomics

Published Date

2024/1/26

BackgroundShort tandem repeats (STRs) are widely distributed across the human genome and are associated with numerous neurological disorders. However, the extent that STRs contribute to disease is likely under-estimated because of the challenges calling these variants in short read next generation sequencing data. Several computational tools have been developed for STR variant calling, but none fully address all of the complexities associated with this variant class.ResultsHere we introduce LUSTR which is designed to address some of the challenges associated with STR variant calling by enabling more flexibility in defining STR loci, allowing for customizable modules to tailor analyses, and expanding the capability to call somatic and multiallelic STR variants. LUSTR is a user-friendly and easily customizable tool for targeted or unbiased genome-wide STR variant screening that can use either predefined …

RNA methyltransferase SPOUT1/CENP-32 links mitotic spindle organization with the neurodevelopmental disorder SpADMiSS

Authors

Avinash V Dharmadhikari,Maria Alba Abad,Sheraz Khan,Reza Maroofian,Tristan T Sands,Farid Ullah,Itaru Samejima,Martin A Wear,Kiara E Moore,Elena Kondakova,Natalia Mitina,Theres Schaub,Grace K Lee,Christine H Umandap,Sara M Berger,Alejandro D Iglesias,Bernt Popp,Rami Abou Jamra,Heinz Gabriel,Stefan Rentas,Alyssa L Rippert,Kosuke Izumi,Laura K Conlin,Daniel C Koboldt,Theresa Mihalic Mosher,Scott E Hickey,Dara VF Albert,Haley Norwood,Amy Feldman Lewanda,Hongzheng Dai,Pengfei Liu,Tadahiro Mitani,Dana Marafi,Davut Pehlivan,Jennifer E Posey,Natalie Lippa,Natalie Vena,Erin L Heinzen,David B Goldstein,Cyril Mignot,Jean-Madeleine de Sainte Agathe,Nouriya Abbas Al-Sannaa,Mina Zamani,Saeid Sadeghian,Tahere Seifia,Maha S Zaki,Ghada MH Abdel-Salam,Mohamed Abdel-Hamid,Lama Alabdi,Fowzan Sami Alkuraya,Heba Dawoud,Aya Lofty,Peter Bauer,Giovanni Zifarelli,Erum Afzal,Faisal Zafar,Stephanie Efthymiou,Daniel Gossett,Meghan C Towne,Raey Yeneabat,Sandeep N Wontakal,Vimla S Aggarwal,Jill A Rosenfeld,Victor Tarabykin,Shinya Ohta,James R Lupski,Henry Houlden,William C Earnshaw,Erica E Davis,A Arockia Jeyaprakash,Jun Liao

Journal

medRxiv

Published Date

2024

SPOUT1/CENP-32 encodes a putative SPOUT RNA methyltransferase previously identified as a mitotic chromosome associated protein. SPOUT1/CENP-32 depletion leads to centrosome detachment from the spindle poles and chromosome misalignment. Aided by gene matching platforms, we identified 24 individuals with neurodevelopmental delays from 18 families with bi-allelic variants in SPOUT1/CENP-32 detected by exome/genome sequencing. Zebrafish spout1/cenp-32 mutants showed reduction in larval head size with concomitant apoptosis likely associated with altered cell cycle progression. In vivo complementation assays in zebrafish indicated that SPOUT1/CENP-32 missense variants identified in humans are pathogenic. Crystal structure analysis of SPOUT1/CENP-32 revealed that most disease-associated missense variants mapped to the catalytic domain. Additionally, SPOUT1/CENP-32 recurrent missense variants had reduced methyltransferase activity in vitro and compromised centrosome tethering to the spindle poles in human cells. Thus, SPOUT1/CENP-32 pathogenic variants cause an autosomal recessive neurodevelopmental disorder: SpADMiSS (SPOUT1 Associated Development delay Microcephaly Seizures Short stature) underpinned by mitotic spindle organization defects and consequent chromosome segregation errors.

Somatic variants as a cause of drug‐resistant epilepsy including mesial temporal lobe epilepsy with hippocampal sclerosis

Authors

Robert J Carton,Michael G Doyle,Hugh Kearney,Charles A Steward,Nicholas J Lench,Anthony Rogers,Erin L Heinzen,Seamus McDonald,Joanna Fay,Austin Lacey,Alan Beausang,Jane Cryan,Francesca Brett,Hany El‐Naggar,Peter Widdess‐Walsh,Daniel Costello,Ronan Kilbride,Colin P Doherty,Kieron J Sweeney,Donncha F O'Brien,David C Henshall,Norman Delanty,Gianpiero L Cavalleri,Katherine A Benson

Journal

Epilepsia

Published Date

2024/3/16

Objective The contribution of somatic variants to epilepsy has recently been demonstrated, particularly in the etiology of malformations of cortical development. The aim of this study was to determine the diagnostic yield of somatic variants in genes that have been previously associated with a somatic or germline epilepsy model, ascertained from resected brain tissue from patients with multidrug‐resistant focal epilepsy. Methods Forty‐two patients were recruited across three categories: (1) malformations of cortical development, (2) mesial temporal lobe epilepsy with hippocampal sclerosis, and (3) nonlesional focal epilepsy. Participants were subdivided based on histopathology of the resected brain. Paired blood‐ and brain‐derived DNA samples were sequenced using high‐coverage targeted next generation sequencing to high depth (585× and 1360×, respectively). Variants were identified using Genome …

The role of copy number variants in the genetic architecture of common familial epilepsies

Authors

Epi4K Consortium,Edith P Almanza Fuerte,John Nguyen,Michelle Mehaffey,Arvis Sulovari,Tianyun Wang,Miranda Galey,Danny E Miller,Evan E Eichler,Heather C Mefford,Bassel Abou‐Khalil,Zaid Afawi Afawi,Andrew S Allen,Dina Amrom,Eva Andermann,Jocelyn F Bautista,Susannah T Bellows,Samuel F Berkovic,Judith Bluvstein,Alexis Boro,Rosemary Burgess,Gregory D Cascino,Seo‐Kyung Chung,Damian Consalvo,Patrick Cossette,Douglas E Crompton,Patricia Crumrine,Sarah W Curtis,Norman Delanty,Orrin Devinsky,Dennis Dlugos,Colin A Ellis,Michael P Epstein,Miguel Fiol,Nathan B Fountain,Catharine Freyer,Dan Friedman,Eric B Geller,Tracy Glauser,Simon Glynn,David B Goldstein,Micheline Gravel,Kevin Haas,Rebekah V Harris,Sheryl Haut,Erin L Heinzen,Sandra Helmers,Olivia J Henry,Sucheta Joshi,Heidi E Kirsch,Sara Kivity,Robert C Knowlton,Eric Kossoff,Ruben Kuzniecky,Rebecca Loeb,Daniel H Lowenstein,Anthony G Marson,Mark McCormack,Shannon M McGuire,Kevin McKenna,Paul V Motika,Saul A Mullen,Edward J Novotny,Terence J O’Brien,Karen L Oliver,Ruth Ottman,Juliann M Paolicchi,Jack M Parent,Kristen L Park,Sarah J Paterson,Slave Petrovski,William O Pickrell,Annapurna Poduri,Mark I Rees,Lynette G Sadleir,Ingrid E Scheffer,Renee A Shellhaas,Elliott H Sherr,Jerry J Shih,Shlomo Shinnar,Rani K Singh,Joseph Sirven,Michael C Smith,Philip EM Smith,Michael R Sperling,Joseph Sullivan,Liu Lin Thio,Rhys H Thomas,Anu Venkat,Eileen PG Vining,Gretchen K Von Allmen,Judith Weisenberg,Peter Widdess‐Walsh,Melodie R Winawer

Journal

Epilepsia

Published Date

2024/3

Objective Copy number variants (CNVs) contribute to genetic risk and genetic etiology of both rare and common epilepsies. Whereas many studies have explored the role of CNVs in sporadic or severe cases, fewer have been done in familial generalized and focal epilepsies. Methods We analyzed exome sequence data from 267 multiplex families and 859 first‐degree relative pairs with a diagnosis of genetic generalized epilepsies or nonacquired focal epilepsies to predict CNVs. Validation and segregation studies were performed using an orthogonal method when possible. Results We identified CNVs likely to contribute to epilepsy risk or etiology in the probands of 43 of 1116 (3.9%) families, including known recurrent CNVs (16p13.11 deletion, 15q13.3 deletion, 15q11.2 deletion, 16p11.2 duplication, 1q21.1 duplication, and 5‐Mb duplication of 15q11q13). We also identified CNVs affecting monogenic …

Exome sequencing of ATP1A3-negative cases of alternating hemiplegia of childhood reveals SCN2A as a novel causative gene

Authors

Eleni Panagiotakaki,Francesco D Tiziano,Mohamad A Mikati,Lisanne S Vijfhuizen,Sophie Nicole,Gaetan Lesca,Emanuela Abiusi,Agnese Novelli,Lorena Di Pietro,IB AHC Consortium,IAHCRC Consortium,Aster VE Harder,Nicole M Walley,Elisa De Grandis,Anne-Lise Poulat,Vincent Des Portes,Anne Lépine,Marie-Cecile Nassogne,Alexis Arzimanoglou,Rosaria Vavassori,Jan Koenderink,Christopher H Thompson,Alfred L George Jr,Fiorella Gurrieri,Arn MJM van den Maagdenberg,Erin L Heinzen

Journal

European Journal of Human Genetics

Published Date

2024/2

Alternating hemiplegia of childhood (AHC) is a rare neurodevelopment disorder that is typically characterized by debilitating episodic attacks of hemiplegia, seizures, and intellectual disability. Over 85% of individuals with AHC have a de novo missense variant in ATP1A3 encoding the catalytic α3 subunit of neuronal Na+/K+ ATPases. The remainder of the patients are genetically unexplained. Here, we used next-generation sequencing to search for the genetic cause of 26 ATP1A3-negative index patients with a clinical presentation of AHC or an AHC-like phenotype. Three patients had affected siblings. Using targeted sequencing of exonic, intronic, and flanking regions of ATP1A3 in 22 of the 26 index patients, we found no ultra-rare variants. Using exome sequencing, we identified the likely genetic diagnosis in 9 probands (35%) in five genes, including RHOBTB2 (n = 3), ATP1A2 (n = 3), ANK3 (n = 1 …

Brain mosaicism of hedgehog signalling and other cilia genes in hypothalamic hamartoma

Authors

Timothy E Green,Atsushi Fujita,Navid Ghaderi,Erin L Heinzen,Naomichi Matsumoto,Karl Martin Klein,Samuel F Berkovic,Michael S Hildebrand

Published Date

2023/8/12

Hypothalamic hamartoma (HH) is a rare benign developmental brain lesion commonly associated with a well characterized epilepsy phenotype. Most individuals with HH are non-syndromic without additional developmental anomalies nor a family history of disease. Nonetheless, HH is a feature of Pallister-Hall (PHS) and Oro-Facial-Digital Type VI (OFD VI) syndromes, both characterized by additional developmental anomalies. Initial genetic of analysis HH began with syndromic HH, where germline inherited or de novo variants in GLI3, encoding a central transcription factor in the sonic hedgehog (Shh) signalling pathway, were identified in most individuals with PHS. Following these discoveries in syndromic HH, the hypothesis that post-zygotic mosaicism in related genes may underly non-syndromic HH was tested. We discuss the identified mosaic variants within individuals with non-syndromic HH, review the …

Loss of Slc35a2 alters development of the mouse cerebral cortex

Authors

Soad Elziny,Sahibjot Sran,Hyojung Yoon,Rachel R Corrigan,John Page,Amanda Ringland,Anna Lanier,Sara Lapidus,James Foreman,Erin L Heinzen,Philip Iffland,Peter B Crino,Tracy A Bedrosian

Journal

Biorxiv

Published Date

2023/11/30

Brain somatic variants in SLC35A2 are associated with clinically drug-resistant epilepsy and developmental brain malformations, including mild malformation of cortical development with oligodendroglial hyperplasia in epilepsy (MOGHE). SLC35A2 encodes a uridine diphosphate galactose translocator that is essential for protein glycosylation; however, the neurodevelopmental mechanisms by which SLC35A2 disruption leads to clinical and histopathological features remain unspecified. We hypothesized that focal knockout (KO) or knockdown (KD) of Slc35a2 in the developing mouse cortex would disrupt cerebral cortical development through altered neuronal migration and cause changes in network excitability. We used in utero electroporation (IUE) to introduce CRISPR/Cas9 and targeted guide RNAs or short-hairpin RNAs to achieve Slc35a2 KO or KD, respectively, during early corticogenesis. Following …

Contribution of somatic Ras/Raf/mitogen-activated protein kinase variants in the hippocampus in drug-resistant mesial temporal lobe epilepsy

Authors

Sattar Khoshkhoo,Yilan Wang,Yasmine Chahine,E Zeynep Erson-Omay,Stephanie M Robert,Emre Kiziltug,Eyiyemisi C Damisah,Carol Nelson-Williams,Guangya Zhu,Wenna Kong,August Yue Huang,Edward Stronge,H Westley Phillips,Brian H Chhouk,Sara Bizzotto,Ming Hui Chen,Thiuni N Adikari,Zimeng Ye,Tom Witkowski,Dulcie Lai,Nadine Lee,Julie Lokan,Ingrid E Scheffer,Samuel F Berkovic,Shozeb Haider,Michael S Hildebrand,Edward Yang,Murat Gunel,Richard P Lifton,R Mark Richardson,Ingmar Blümcke,Sanda Alexandrescu,Anita Huttner,Erin L Heinzen,Jidong Zhu,Annapurna Poduri,Nihal DeLanerolle,Dennis D Spencer,Eunjung Alice Lee,Christopher A Walsh,Kristopher T Kahle

Journal

JAMA neurology

Published Date

2023/5/1

ImportanceMesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE) is the most common focal epilepsy subtype and is often refractory to antiseizure medications. While most patients with MTLE do not have pathogenic germline genetic variants, the contribution of postzygotic (ie, somatic) variants in the brain is unknown.ObjectiveTo test the association between pathogenic somatic variants in the hippocampus and MTLE.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsThis case-control genetic association study analyzed the DNA derived from hippocampal tissue of neurosurgically treated patients with MTLE and age-matched and sex-matched neurotypical controls. Participants treated at level 4 epilepsy centers were enrolled from 1988 through 2019, and clinical data were collected retrospectively. Whole-exome and gene-panel sequencing (each genomic region sequenced more than 500 times on average) were used to identify candidate …

Mosaic variants detectable in blood extend the clinico-genetic spectrum of GLI3-related hypothalamic hamartoma

Authors

Timothy E Green,Mark F Bennett,Ilka Immisch,Jeremy L Freeman,Karl Martin Klein,John F Kerrigan,Lata Vadlamudi,Erin L Heinzen,Ingrid E Scheffer,A Simon Harvey,Felix Rosenow,Michael S Hildebrand,Samuel F Berkovic

Journal

Genetics in Medicine Open

Published Date

2023/1/1

PurposeHypothalamic hamartoma (HH) can be syndromic (eg, Pallister-Hall syndrome [PHS], HH, and mesoaxial polydactyly) or nonsyndromic. Most PHS cases have germline variants in GLI3, but a minority remain unresolved. Some nonsyndromic HH cases have GLI3 mosaic variants in the brain. PHS and nonsyndromic HH are regarded as 2 separate GLI3-related disorders, clinically and genetically. Here, we searched for mosaic variants in unsolved cases.MethodsHigh-depth exome sequencing was performed on leukocyte-derived DNA in 1 unsolved PHS and 25 nonsyndromic HH cases. We searched for mosaic variants in GLI3 and other HH-associated genes. Mosaic variants were confirmed by droplet-digital polymerase chain reaction.ResultsThe PHS case had a GLI3 stop-gain variant c.2845G>T; p.(Glu949Ter) at 6.9% variant allele fraction (VAF). Two nonsyndromic cases had GLI3 variants—a stop-gain …

Rare genetic variation and outcome of surgery for mesial temporal lobe epilepsy

Authors

Piero Perucca,Kate Stanley,Natasha Harris,Anne M McIntosh,Ali A Asadi‐Pooya,Mohamad A Mikati,Danielle M Andrade,Patricia Dugan,Chantal Depondt,Hyunmi Choi,Erin L Heinzen,Gianpiero L Cavalleri,Russell J Buono,Orrin Devinsky,Michael R Sperling,Samuel F Berkovic,Norman Delanty,David B Goldstein,Terence J O'Brien,EPIGEN Consortium,Danielle Andrade,Arjune Sen,Carl W Bazil,Michael Boland,Gianpiero Cavalleri,Hyunmi Choi,Sophie Colombo,Daniel Costello,Norman Delanty,Chantal Depondt,Orrin Devinsky,Colin Patrick Doherty,Patricia Dugan,Wayne Frankel,David Goldstein,Erin Heinzen,Michael Johnson,Patrick Kwan,Tony Marson,Mark McCormack,Mohamad Mikati,Terry O'Brien,Ruth Ottman,Massimo Pandolfo,Piero Perucca,Slave Petrovski,Rodney Radtke,Mark Rees,Tara Sadoway,Nicole Valley,Nicole Walley,Nicholas Wood,Sameer Zuberi

Journal

Annals of neurology

Published Date

2023/4

Objective Genetic factors have long been debated as a cause of failure of surgery for mesial temporal lobe epilepsy (MTLE). We investigated whether rare genetic variation influences seizure outcomes of MTLE surgery. Methods We performed an international, multicenter, whole exome sequencing study of patients who underwent surgery for drug‐resistant, unilateral MTLE with normal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) or MRI evidence of hippocampal sclerosis and ≥2‐year postsurgical follow‐up. Patients with either sustained seizure freedom (favorable outcome) or ongoing uncontrolled seizures since surgery (unfavorable outcome) were included. Exomes of controls without epilepsy were also included. Gene set burden analyses were carried out to identify genes with significant enrichment of rare deleterious variants in patients compared to controls. Results Nine centers from 3 continents contributed 206 …

Post-zygotic rescue of meiotic errors causes brain mosaicism and focal epilepsy

Authors

Katherine E Miller,Adithe C Rivaldi,Noriyuki Shinagawa,Sahib Sran,Jason B Navarro,Jesse J Westfall,Anthony R Miller,Ryan D Roberts,Yassmine Akkari,Rachel Supinger,Mark E Hester,Mohammad Marhabaie,Meethila Gade,Jinfeng Lu,Olga Rodziyevska,Meenakshi B Bhattacharjee,Gretchen K Von Allmen,Edward Yang,Hart GW Lidov,Chellamani Harini,Manish N Shah,Jeffrey Leonard,Jonathan Pindrik,Ammar Shaikhouni,James E Goldman,Christopher R Pierson,Diana L Thomas,Daniel R Boué,Adam P Ostendorf,Elaine R Mardis,Annapurna Poduri,Daniel C Koboldt,Erin L Heinzen,Tracy A Bedrosian

Journal

Nature Genetics

Published Date

2023/11

Somatic mosaicism is a known cause of neurological disorders, including developmental brain malformations and epilepsy. Brain mosaicism is traditionally attributed to post-zygotic genetic alterations arising in fetal development. Here we describe post-zygotic rescue of meiotic errors as an alternate origin of brain mosaicism in patients with focal epilepsy who have mosaic chromosome 1q copy number gains. Genomic analysis showed evidence of an extra parentally derived chromosome 1q allele in the resected brain tissue from five of six patients. This copy number gain is observed only in patient brain tissue, but not in blood or buccal cells, and is strongly enriched in astrocytes. Astrocytes carrying chromosome 1q gains exhibit distinct gene expression signatures and hyaline inclusions, supporting a novel genetic association for astrocytic inclusions in epilepsy. Further, these data demonstrate an alternate …

Prophecy or empiricism? Clinical value of predicting versus determining genetic variant functions

Authors

Andreas Brunklaus,Alfred L George Jr,Dennis Lal,Erin L Heinzen,Alica M Goldman

Journal

Epilepsia

Published Date

2023/11

The recent explosion of epilepsy genetic testing has created challenges for interpretation of gene variants. Assessments of the functional consequences of genetic variants either by predictive or experimental strategies can contribute to estimating pathogenicity, but there is no consensus on which approach is best. The Special Interest Group on Epilepsy Genetics hosted a session during the Annual American Epilepsy Society Meeting in December 2022 to discuss this topic. The session featured a debate of the relative advantages and limitations of predicting (prophecy) versus experimentally determining (empiricism) variant function using ion channel gene variants as examples. This commentary summarizes these discussions.

Slc35a2 Knockout Alters Golgi Structure and Dendritic Arborization

Authors

Soad M Elziny,Philip Iffland,Janice K Babus,Marianna Baybis,Allan E Barnes,Paulina Sosicka,Dulcie Lai,Erin Heinzen,Peter B Crino

Published Date

2022/3/21

• Mouse Neuro2a cells (N2aC) were transfected using Lipofectamine in serum-free media with either the Slc35a2 KO plasmid or a Scramble (Scr) plasmid to create stable cell lines.

Somatic variants in diverse genes leads to a spectrum of focal cortical malformations

Authors

Dulcie Lai,Meethila Gade,Edward Yang,Hyun Yong Koh,Jinfeng Lu,Nicole M Walley,Anne F Buckley,Tristan T Sands,Cigdem I Akman,Mohamad A Mikati,Guy M McKhann,James E Goldman,Peter Canoll,Allyson L Alexander,Kristen L Park,Gretchen K Von Allmen,Olga Rodziyevska,Meenakshi B Bhattacharjee,Hart GW Lidov,Hannes Vogel,Gerald A Grant,Brenda E Porter,Annapurna H Poduri,Peter B Crino,Erin L Heinzen

Journal

Brain

Published Date

2022/8/1

Post-zygotically acquired genetic variants, or somatic variants, that arise during cortical development have emerged as important causes of focal epilepsies, particularly those due to malformations of cortical development. Pathogenic somatic variants have been identified in many genes within the PI3K-AKT-mTOR-signalling pathway in individuals with hemimegalencephaly and focal cortical dysplasia (type II), and more recently in SLC35A2 in individuals with focal cortical dysplasia (type I) or non-dysplastic epileptic cortex. Given the expanding role of somatic variants across different brain malformations, we sought to delineate the landscape of somatic variants in a large cohort of patients who underwent epilepsy surgery with hemimegalencephaly or focal cortical dysplasia. We evaluated samples from 123 children with hemimegalencephaly (n = 16), focal cortical dysplasia type I and related phenotypes (n …

Association of ultra‐rare coding variants with genetic generalized epilepsy: A case–control whole exome sequencing study

Authors

Mahmoud Koko,Joshua E Motelow,Kate E Stanley,Dheeraj R Bobbili,Ryan S Dhindsa,Patrick May,Canadian Epilepsy Network,Epi4K Consortium,Epilepsy Phenome/Genome Project,EpiPGX Consortium,EuroEPINOMICS‐CoGIE Consortium,Brian K Alldredge,Andrew S Allen,Janine Altmüller,Dina Amrom,Eva Andermann,Pauls Auce,Andreja Avbersek,Stéphanie Baulac,Jocelyn F Bautista,Felicitas Becker,Susannah T Bellows,Bianca Berghuis,Samuel F Berkovic,Judith Bluvstein,Alex Boro,Joshua Bridgers,Rosemary Burgess,Hande Caglayan,Gregory D Cascino,Gianpiero L Cavalleri,Seo‐Kyung Chung,Cécile Cieuta‐Walti,Véronique Cloutier,Damian Consalvo,Patrick Cossette,Patricia Crumrine,Norman Delanty,Chantal Depondt,Richard Desbiens,Orrin Devinsky,Dennis Dlugos,Michael P Epstein,Kate Everett,Miguel Fiol,Nathan B Fountain,Ben Francis,Jacqueline French,Catharine Freyer,Daniel Friedman,Antonio Gambardella,Eric B Geller,Simon Girard,Tracy Glauser,Simon Glynn,David B Goldstein,Micheline Gravel,Kevin Haas,Sheryl R Haut,Erin L Heinzen,Ingo Helbig,Michael S Hildebrand,Michael R Johnson,Andrea Jorgensen,Sucheta Joshi,Andres Kanner,Heidi E Kirsch,Karl M Klein,Robert C Knowlton,Bobby PC Koeleman,Eric H Kossoff,Roland Krause,Martin Krenn,Wolfram S Kunz,Ruben Kuzniecky,Sarah R Langley,Eric LeGuern,Anna‐Elina Lehesjoki,Holger Lerche,Costin Leu,Anne Lortie,Daniel H Lowenstein,Anthony G Marson,Caroline Mebane,Heather C Mefford,Caroline Meloche,Claudia Moreau,Paul V Motika,Hiltrud Muhle,Rikke S Møller,Rima Nabbout,Dang K Nguyen,Marina Nikanorova,Edward J Novotny,Peter Nürnberg,Ruth Ottman,Terence J O’Brien,Juliann M Paolicchi,Jack M Parent,Kristen Park,Sarah Peter,Steven Petrou,Slavé Petrovski,William O Pickrell,Annapurna Poduri,Rodney A Radtke,Mark I Rees,Brigid M Regan,Zhong Ren,Lynette G Sadleir,Josemir W Sander,Thomas Sander,Ingrid E Scheffer,Julian Schubert,Renée A Shellhaas,Elliott H Sherr,Jerry J Shih,Shlomo Shinnar,Graeme J Sills,Rani K Singh,Auli Siren,Joseph Sirven,Sanjay M Sisodiya,Michael C Smith,Anja CM Sonsma,Pasquale Striano,Joseph Sullivan,Liu Lin Thio,Rhys H Thomas,Anu Venkat,Eileen PG Vining,Gretchen K Von Allmen,Quanli Wang,Yvonne G Weber,Sarah Weckhuysen,Judith L Weisenberg,Peter Widdess‐Walsh,Melodie R Winawer,Stefan Wolking,Federico Zara,Fritz Zimprich

Journal

Epilepsia

Published Date

2022/3

Objective We aimed to identify genes associated with genetic generalized epilepsy (GGE) by combining large cohorts enriched with individuals with a positive family history. Secondarily, we set out to compare the association of genes independently with familial and sporadic GGE. Methods We performed a case–control whole exome sequencing study in unrelated individuals of European descent diagnosed with GGE (previously recruited and sequenced through multiple international collaborations) and ancestry‐matched controls. The association of ultra‐rare variants (URVs; in 18 834 protein‐coding genes) with epilepsy was examined in 1928 individuals with GGE (vs. 8578 controls), then separately in 945 individuals with familial GGE (vs. 8626 controls), and finally in 1005 individuals with sporadic GGE (vs. 8621 controls). We additionally examined the association of URVs with familial and sporadic GGE in …

Sporadic hypothalamic hamartoma is a ciliopathy with somatic and bi-allelic contributions

Authors

Timothy E Green,Joshua E Motelow,Mark F Bennett,Zimeng Ye,Caitlin A Bennett,Nicole G Griffin,John A Damiano,Richard J Leventer,Jeremy L Freeman,A Simon Harvey,Paul J Lockhart,Lynette G Sadleir,Amber Boys,Ingrid E Scheffer,Heather Major,Benjamin W Darbro,Melanie Bahlo,David B Goldstein,John F Kerrigan,Erin L Heinzen,Samuel F Berkovic,Michael S Hildebrand

Journal

Human molecular genetics

Published Date

2022/7/15

Hypothalamic hamartoma with gelastic seizures is a well-established cause of drug-resistant epilepsy in early life. The development of novel surgical techniques has permitted the genomic interrogation of hypothalamic hamartoma tissue. This has revealed causative mosaic variants within GLI3, OFD1 and other key regulators of the sonic-hedgehog pathway in a minority of cases. Sonic-hedgehog signalling proteins localize to the cellular organelle primary cilia. We therefore explored the hypothesis that cilia gene variants may underlie hitherto unsolved cases of sporadic hypothalamic hamartoma. We performed high-depth exome sequencing and chromosomal microarray on surgically resected hypothalamic hamartoma tissue and paired leukocyte-derived DNA from 27 patients. We searched for both germline and somatic variants under both dominant and bi-allelic genetic models. In hamartoma-derived DNA …

The benefit of diagnostic whole genome sequencing in schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders

Authors

Anna Alkelai,Lior Greenbaum,Anna R Docherty,Andrey A Shabalin,Gundula Povysil,Ayan Malakar,Daniel Hughes,Shannon L Delaney,Emma P Peabody,James McNamara,Sahar Gelfman,Evan H Baugh,Anthony W Zoghbi,Matthew B Harms,Hann-Shyan Hwang,Anat Grossman-Jonish,Vimla Aggarwal,Erin L Heinzen,Vaidehi Jobanputra,Ann E Pulver,Bernard Lerer,David B Goldstein

Journal

Molecular Psychiatry

Published Date

2022/3

Schizophrenia has a multifactorial etiology, involving a polygenic architecture. The potential benefit of whole genome sequencing (WGS) in schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders is not well studied. We investigated the yield of clinical WGS analysis in 251 families with a proband diagnosed with schizophrenia (N = 190), schizoaffective disorder (N = 49), or other conditions involving psychosis (N = 48). Participants were recruited in Israel and USA, mainly of Jewish, Arab, and other European ancestries. Trio (parents and proband) WGS was performed for 228 families (90.8%); in the other families, WGS included parents and at least two affected siblings. In the secondary analyses, we evaluated the contribution of rare variant enrichment in particular gene sets, and calculated polygenic risk score (PRS) for schizophrenia. For the primary outcome, diagnostic rate was 6.4%; we found clinically significant …

Common risk variants for epilepsy are enriched in families previously targeted for rare monogenic variant discovery

Authors

Karen L Oliver,Colin A Ellis,Ingrid E Scheffer,Shiva Ganesan,Costin Leu,Lynette G Sadleir,Erin L Heinzen,Heather C Mefford,Andrew J Bass,Sarah W Curtis,Rebekah V Harris,David C Whiteman,Ingo Helbig,Ruth Ottman,Michael P Epstein,Melanie Bahlo,Samuel F Berkovic

Journal

EBioMedicine

Published Date

2022/7/1

BackgroundThe epilepsies are highly heritable conditions that commonly follow complex inheritance. While monogenic causes have been identified in rare familial epilepsies, most familial epilepsies remain unsolved. We aimed to determine (1) whether common genetic variation contributes to familial epilepsy risk, and (2) whether that genetic risk is enriched in familial compared with non-familial (sporadic) epilepsies.MethodsUsing common variants derived from the largest epilepsy genome-wide association study, we calculated polygenic risk scores (PRS) for patients with familial epilepsy (n = 1,818 from 1,181 families), their unaffected relatives (n = 771), sporadic patients (n = 1,182), and population controls (n = 15,929). We also calculated separate PRS for genetic generalised epilepsy (GGE) and focal epilepsy. Statistical analyses used mixed-effects regression models to account for familial relatedness, sex …

Genomic analysis of “microphenotypes” in epilepsy

Authors

Kate Stanley,Joseph Hostyk,Linh Tran,Marta Amengual‐Gual,Patricia Dugan,Justice Clark,Hyunmi Choi,Dmitry Tchapyjnikov,Piero Perucca,Cecilia Fernandes,Danielle Andrade,Orrin Devinsky,pSERG Consortium,the EPIGEN Consortium,Gianpiero L Cavalleri,Chantal Depondt,Arjune Sen,Terence O'Brien,Erin Heinzen,Tobias Loddenkemper,David B Goldstein,Mohamed A Mikati,Norman Delanty

Journal

American Journal of Medical Genetics Part A

Published Date

2022/1

Large international consortia examining the genomic architecture of the epilepsies focus on large diagnostic subgroupings such as “all focal epilepsy” and “all genetic generalized epilepsy”. In addition, phenotypic data are generally entered into these large discovery databases in a unidirectional manner at one point in time only. However, there are many smaller phenotypic subgroupings in epilepsy, many of which may have unique genomic risk factors. Such a subgrouping or “microphenotype” may be defined as an uncommon or rare phenotype that is well recognized by epileptologists and the epilepsy community, and which may or may not be formally recognized within the International League Against Epilepsy classification system. Here we examine the genetic structure of a number of such microphenotypes and report in particular on two interesting clinical phenotypes, Jeavons syndrome and pediatric status …

A pharmacogenomic assessment of psychiatric adverse drug reactions to levetiracetam

Authors

Ciarán Campbell,Mark McCormack,Sonn Patel,Caragh Stapleton,Dheeraj Bobbili,Roland Krause,Chantal Depondt,Graeme J Sills,Bobby P Koeleman,Pasquale Striano,Federico Zara,Josemir W Sander,Holger Lerche,Wolfram S Kunz,Kari Stefansson,Hreinn Stefansson,Colin P Doherty,Erin L Heinzen,Ingrid E Scheffer,David B Goldstein,Terence O'Brien,David Cotter,Samuel F Berkovic,EpiPGX Consortium,Sanjay M Sisodiya,Norman Delanty,Gianpiero L Cavalleri

Journal

Epilepsia

Published Date

2022/6

Objective Levetiracetam (LEV) is an effective antiseizure medicine, but 10%–20% of people treated with LEV report psychiatric side‐effects, and up to 1% may have psychotic episodes. Pharmacogenomic predictors of these adverse drug reactions (ADRs) have yet to be identified. We sought to determine the contribution of both common and rare genetic variation to psychiatric and behavioral ADRs associated with LEV. Methods This case‐control study compared cases of LEV‐associated behavioral disorder (n = 149) or psychotic reaction (n = 37) to LEV‐exposed people with no history of psychiatric ADRs (n = 920). All samples were of European ancestry. We performed genome‐wide association study (GWAS) analysis comparing those with LEV ADRs to controls. We estimated the polygenic risk scores (PRS) for schizophrenia and compared cases with LEV‐associated psychotic reaction to controls. Rare variant …

See List of Professors in Erin Heinzen University(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)

Erin Heinzen FAQs

What is Erin Heinzen's h-index at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill?

The h-index of Erin Heinzen has been 38 since 2020 and 51 in total.

What are Erin Heinzen's top articles?

The articles with the titles of

LUSTR: a new customizable tool for calling genome-wide germline and somatic short tandem repeat variants

RNA methyltransferase SPOUT1/CENP-32 links mitotic spindle organization with the neurodevelopmental disorder SpADMiSS

Somatic variants as a cause of drug‐resistant epilepsy including mesial temporal lobe epilepsy with hippocampal sclerosis

The role of copy number variants in the genetic architecture of common familial epilepsies

Exome sequencing of ATP1A3-negative cases of alternating hemiplegia of childhood reveals SCN2A as a novel causative gene

Brain mosaicism of hedgehog signalling and other cilia genes in hypothalamic hamartoma

Loss of Slc35a2 alters development of the mouse cerebral cortex

Contribution of somatic Ras/Raf/mitogen-activated protein kinase variants in the hippocampus in drug-resistant mesial temporal lobe epilepsy

...

are the top articles of Erin Heinzen at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

What are Erin Heinzen's research interests?

The research interests of Erin Heinzen are: neuropsychiatric disease genomics

What is Erin Heinzen's total number of citations?

Erin Heinzen has 17,686 citations in total.

What are the co-authors of Erin Heinzen?

The co-authors of Erin Heinzen are Anna Need.

    Co-Authors

    H-index: 46
    Anna Need

    Anna Need

    Imperial College London

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