📖
wiki page

PCDH19 Clustering Epilepsy

📖 Wiki Page
disease1225 wordssynced 2026-04-02

PCDH19 Clustering Epilepsy

Overview

PCDH19 clustering epilepsy, also known as Epilepsy and Intellectual Disability in Females (EFMR) or simply PCDH19-related epilepsy, is a rare X-linked dominant neurodevelopmental disorder caused by pathogenic variants in the [PCDH19](/entities/pcdh19) gene. The condition predominantly affects heterozygous females, despite the gene being located on the X chromosome — a paradox explained by the cellular interference mechanism, where random X-inactivation creates a mosaic of wild-type and mutant cells that disrupts normal circuit formation.

The hallmark of PCDH19 epilepsy is the tendency for seizures to cluster — multiple seizures occurring within a short period — often triggered by fever, illness, or sleep deprivation. The disorder ranges from mild to severe, with most patients experiencing drug-resistant epilepsy and varying degrees of intellectual disability[@pcdh19_2011][@pcdh19_2017].

Genetics and Molecular Basis

PCDH19 Gene

[PCDH19](/entities/pcdh19) (Protocadherin-19) is located on chromosome Xq13.3 and encodes a non-clustered protocadherin of the cadherin superfamily. The gene contains 6 coding exons and produces a 1,118 amino acid protein expressed predominantly in excitatory neurons of the cerebral cortex, hippocampus, and cerebellum.

Cellular Interference Mechanism

The unique inheritance pattern of PCDH19 epilepsy — females affected, males typically unaffected — is explained by the cellular interference model:

...
📖 View canonical wiki page →
Related Entities
diseases-pcdh19-clustering-epilepsy
View on SciDEX ↗