Developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 114

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Summary

Developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 114 (MONDO:0958331) is a disease caused by SLC32A1 (GenCC Strong), with 1 cohort gene.

At a glance

  • Causal gene: SLC32A1 (GenCC Strong)
  • Cohort genes: 1
  • ClinVar variants: 3

Clinical features

No curated clinical features (Orphanet) for this disease.

Identifiers

Disease identifiers

FieldValue
Canonical namedevelopmental and epileptic encephalopathy 114
Mondo IDMONDO:0958331
OMIM620774
UMLSC5935598
MedGen1860189
GARD0027011
Is cancer (heuristic)no

Data availability: 3 ClinVar variants · 2 GenCC gene-disease records.

Disease family

Classification path: disease › human disease › disease by etiologic mechanism › disease of genetic or genomic mechanism › hereditary diseasehereditary neurological diseaseMendelian neurodevelopmental disordergenetic developmental and epileptic encephalopathydevelopmental and epileptic encephalopathy 114

Related subtypes (104): developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 9, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 8, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 2, multiple congenital anomalies-hypotonia-seizures syndrome 2, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 36, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 1, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 3, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 4, microcephaly, seizures, and developmental delay, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 5, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 7, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 11, neonatal-onset encephalopathy with rigidity and seizures, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 14, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 15, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 17, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 18, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 19, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 23, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 27, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 30, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 50, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 35, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 37, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 38, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 40, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 48, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 49, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 51, Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 91, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 92, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 93, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 96, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 90, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 85, with or without midline brain defects, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 67, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 86, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 87, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 88, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 6B, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 97, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 98, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 99, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 100, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 101, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 89, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 102, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 103, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 104, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 105 with hypopituitarism, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 106, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 107, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 68, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 69, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 70, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 71, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 72, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 74, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 75, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 76, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 77, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 78, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 79, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 80, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 81, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 82, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 83, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 84, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 52, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 53, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 54, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 55, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 56, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 57, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 58, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 59, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 60, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 61, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 62, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 63, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 64, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 65, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 73, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 66, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, 6A, non-neonatal early infantile epileptic encephalopathy, Dravet syndrome, neonatal-onset developmental and epileptic encephalopathy, hemiplegic migraine-developmental and epileptic encephalopathy spectrum, DNM1-encephalopathy and neurodevelopmental disorder, TMEM63B-related developmental and epileptic encephalopathy with anemia, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 108, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 109, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 110, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 111, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 112, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 113, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 115, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 116, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 118, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 120, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 121, developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 119

Genetics & variants

GWAS landscape

No GWAS associations recorded — common-variant (GWAS) studies don’t cover this disease (typical for Mendelian / rare diseases). See the curated gene cohort and Mendelian overlap below.

Variant details and genetic-evidence tiers

ClinVar germline variants

3 retrieved; paginated sample, class counts are floors:

1 conflicting classifications of pathogenicity, 1 likely pathogenic, 1 pathogenic

ClinVarVariant (HGVS)GeneClassificationReview
3064670NM_080552.3(SLC32A1):c.806T>A (p.Leu269Gln)SLC32A1Pathogenicno assertion criteria provided
1329950NM_080552.3(SLC32A1):c.965T>G (p.Phe322Cys)SLC32A1Likely pathogeniccriteria provided, single submitter
1329948NM_080552.3(SLC32A1):c.787G>A (p.Val263Met)SLC32A1Conflicting classifications of pathogenicitycriteria provided, conflicting classifications

Genes & proteins

Mendelian disease overlap and somatic drivers

GenCC: 3 · Orphanet: 2 · OMIM-shared: 0 · Dual-evidence (GWAS+Mendelian): 0

GenCC gene–disease validity (cohort genes)

the Disease column is the GenCC-asserted condition — a cohort gene’s strongest validity may be for a related predisposition syndrome.

GeneClassificationInheritanceDiseaseRecords
SLC32A1StrongAutosomal dominantdevelopmental and epileptic encephalopathy 1143

Orphanet rare-disease linkage (cohort genes)

GeneOrphanet IDRare disease
SLC32A1Orphanet:1934Early infantile developmental and epileptic encephalopathy
SLC32A1Orphanet:36387Genetic epilepsy with febrile seizure plus

Cohort genes → proteins

1 cohort genes, 1 distinct canonical proteins.

Evidence partition

SubsetGenes
multi_evidence1

Cohort genes (full)

SymbolHGNCEnsemblUniProtNameEvidence
SLC32A1HGNC:11018ENSG00000101438Q9H598Vesicular inhibitory amino acid transportergencc,clinvar

Cohort function summary

Lead sentence per gene, UniProt-curated.

SymbolProtein nameFunction (lead sentence)
SLC32A1Vesicular inhibitory amino acid transporterAntiporter that exchanges vesicular protons for cytosolic 4-aminobutanoate or to a lesser extend glycine, thus allowing their secretion from nerve terminals.

Protein-family classification

Druggable: 0 · Difficult: 0 · Unknown: 1 · Druggable fraction: 0.0

Family distribution

Cohort families vs a genome-wide background (hypergeometric, BH-FDR; fold = observed/expected). Counts kept; sorted by enrichment, so the catch-all Other/Unknown bucket no longer leads.

FamilyGenesFoldFDR
Other/Unknown11.8×0.558

Per-gene assignment

SymbolFamilyDruggable?ECInterPro (top 3)
SLC32A1Other/UnknownnoAA_transpt_TM

Expression context

Cohort genes with no expression data: 0.

1 cohort gene are a single-cell marker in ≥1 SCXA experiment.

Breadth distribution (Bgee present_calls)

BucketGenes
narrow (1-5 tissues)0
moderate (6-20)0
broad (>20)1
unknown0

Top tissues across cohort

TissueCohort genes
nucleus accumbens1
prefrontal cortex1
putamen1

Per-gene tissue summary (top 30)

SymbolBgee breadthFANTOM5 breadthSCXATop tissues
SLC32A169broadmarkernucleus accumbens, putamen, prefrontal cortex

Protein interactions among cohort

Intra-cohort edges: 0.

Hub genes (top 10 by interactor count)

SymbolInteractor count
SLC32A13,331

Structural data

PDB: 0 · AlphaFold-only: 1 · No structure: 0

AlphaFold-only cohort genes (top 30 by pLDDT)

SymbolUniProtpLDDT
SLC32A1Q9H59878.69

Function

Pathway analysis

Distinct Reactome pathways touched by cohort: 2. Enrichment computed across 1 evidence-associated genes (1 with Reactome annotation).

Pathways by enrichment

Over-representation of cohort genes vs the genome-wide background (hypergeometric test, Benjamini-Hochberg FDR; fold = observed/expected over 1 annotated cohort genes). Counts and members are kept as ground-truth; sorted by enrichment.

PathwayCohort genesFoldFDRSample cohort genes
GABA synthesis, release, reuptake and degradation1634.4×0.002SLC32A1
SLC-mediated transport of neurotransmitters1407.9×0.002SLC32A1

GO biological processes by enrichment

Over-representation of cohort genes vs the genome-wide background (hypergeometric test, Benjamini-Hochberg FDR; fold = observed/expected over 1 annotated cohort genes). Counts and members are kept as ground-truth; sorted by enrichment.

GO termCohort genesFoldFDRSample cohort genes
beta-alanine transport18426.0×5e-04SLC32A1
gamma-aminobutyric acid transport18426.0×5e-04SLC32A1
gamma-aminobutyric acid import12808.7×7e-04SLC32A1
neurotransmitter loading into synaptic vesicle12808.7×7e-04SLC32A1
glycine transport11404.3×0.001SLC32A1
neurotransmitter secretion1702.2×0.002SLC32A1
hippocampus development1230.8×0.005SLC32A1
monoatomic ion transport1156.0×0.006SLC32A1

Therapeutics

Drug target analysis

Approved (phase 4): 0 · Phase ≥3: 0 · Phased (≥1): 0 · Undrugged: 1

Druggability breadth: 0 of 1 evidence-associated genes (0%) have a ChEMBL target (buckets above are over the deeply-mined display cohort).

Top cohort targets by molecule count

SymbolMoleculesMax phase
SLC32A100

Bioactivity and enzyme data

Enzyme cohort genes (≥1 EC): 0.

Pharmacogenomics

Cohort genes with a PharmGKB record: 1; with CPIC/DPWG dosing guidelines: 0.

No cohort gene has a CPIC/DPWG genotype-guided dosing guideline (PharmGKB).

Chemical tractability of cohort targets

0 approved/phased compounds have measured bioactivity against a cohort gene (and aren’t yet in disease-level trials). This is a research / tractability signal, NOT a therapeutic recommendation — a bioactivity row often reflects off-target or screening binding (e.g. promiscuous kinase inhibitors against a cohort kinase), implying no disease mechanism.

Druggability pyramid

Cohort genes binned by druggability tier (high → low):

TierDefinitionGenesSymbols
AApproved (phase 4 drug)0
BPhased (≥1) drug, not yet approved0
CDruggable family + PDB, no drug0
DDruggable family + AlphaFold only, no drug0
EDifficult family or no structure, no drug1SLC32A1

Undrugged target profiles

1 cohort genes are undrugged. Ranked by ‘starting-point quality’ (assay depth + drugged-partner adjacency).

SymbolChEMBL assaysDrugged partners (top 3)
SLC32A10

Clinical trials & evidence

Clinical trials

Clinical trials: 0.