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SYNGAP1-Related Epilepsy

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disease1335 wordssynced 2026-04-02

Overview

SYNGAP1-related epilepsy (also known as SYNGAP1-related developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, DEE) is a rare genetic disorder caused by heterozygous loss-of-function variants in the SYNGAP1 gene. This condition is characterized by early-onset epilepsy, typically presenting in the first two years of life, profound intellectual disability, and frequently co-occurring autism spectrum disorder and behavioral challenges.

SYNGAP1 is a critical synaptic plasticity gene that regulates AMPA receptor trafficking and synaptic strength. Pathogenic variants lead to excessive neuronal excitation due to dysregulated synaptic homeostasis, making this an attractive target for gene therapy and antisense oligonucleotide approaches.

Genetics and Molecular Basis

SYNGAP1 Gene

[SYNGAP1](/genes/syngap1) (Synaptic Ras GTPase Activating Protein 1) is located on chromosome 6p21.3 and encodes SynGAP1, a Ras GTPase-activating protein highly enriched at excitatory synapses. The gene spans approximately 1.4 Mb and contains 21 exons. Over 300 pathogenic variants have been identified, with the majority being:

  • Nonsense variants (~40%): premature stop codons leading to truncated proteins
  • Frameshift variants (~30%): indels causing reading frame shifts
  • Missense variants (~20%): amino acid substitutions affecting protein function
  • Splice site variants (~10%): aberrant mRNA processing

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