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SRR intronic variation inhibits expression of its neighbouring SMG6 gene and protects against temporal lobe epilepsy.

D-serine is a predominant N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor co-agonist with glutamate, and excessive activation of the receptor plays a substantial role in epileptic seizures. Serine racemase (SRR) is responsible for transforming L-serine to D-serine. In this study, we aimed to investigate the genetic roles of SRR and a neighbouring gene, nonsense-mediated mRNA decay factor (SMG6), in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). Here, a total of 496 TLE patients and 528 healthy individuals were successfully genotyped for three SRR tag single nucleotide polymorphisms. The frequencies of the GG genotype at rs4523957 T > G were reduced in the TLE cases in the initial cohort (cohort 1) and were confirmed in the independent cohort (cohort 2). An analysis of all TLE cases in cohort 1 + 2 revealed that the seizure frequency and drug-resistant incidence were significantly decreased in carriers of the GG genotype at rs4523957. Intriguingly, the activity of the SMG6 promoter with the mutant allele at rs4523957 decreased by 22% in the dual-luciferase assay, and up-regulated expression of SMG6 was observed in an epilepsy rat model. This study provides the first demonstration that the GG genotype is a protective marker against TLE. In particular, variation at rs4523957 likely inhibits SMG6 transcription and plays a key role against susceptibility to and severity of TLE. The significance of SMG6 hyperfunction in epileptic seizures deserves to be investigated in future studies.

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