A number of observations point to chromosome 15 as a good candidate to harb
or genes involved in epilepsy. This hypothesis is supported by at least two
lines of evidence: one is the finding that haploinsufficiency of the 15q11
-q13 region, of maternal origin, is responsible for Angelman syndrome, one
of the cardinal manifestations of which is epilepsy; the second is the obse
rvation that extra copies of this same genomic region, in the form of inv-d
up(15) or intrachromosomal duplications, again of maternal origin, are usua
lly associated with a severe neurological phenotype characterized by develo
pmental delay and untreatable seizures. Therefore, both reduced and increas
ed dosage of genes from the 15q11-q13 region, possibly subjected to materna
l imprinting, appear to be causally involved in severe forms of epilepsy. W
e tested the hypothesis that submicroscopic rearrangements of this genomic
region might be responsible for nonsyndromic epilepsy in both familial and
sporadic forms. To this purpose, we genotyped 118 epileptic patients and th
eir parents with closely spaced microsatellite markers mapped within the 15
q11-q13 region. We report on the results of these studies and review the re
levant literature. (C) 2001 Wiley-Liss, Inc.