Epilepsy is a mechanistically complex, incompletely understood neurological disorder. To uncover novel converging mechanisms in epilepsy, we used Drosophila whole-brain single-cell RNA sequencing to refine and characterize a previously proposed human epilepsy-associated gene co-expression network (GCN). We identified a conserved co-expressed module of 26 genes, which comprises fly orthologs of 13 epilepsy-associated genes and integrates synaptic and metabolic functions. Over one-third of the Drosophila pan-neuronal knockdown models targeting this module exhibited altered seizure-like behaviors in response to mechanical or heat stress. These knockdown models recapitulated seizures associated with four epilepsy-associated genes, identified two novel epilepsy candidate genes, and three genes of which knockdown conferred seizure protection. Most knockdown models with altered seizure susceptibility showed changes in metabolic rate and levels of phosphorylated adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase (AMPK), a key regulator of cellular energy homeostasis. Enhancing AMPK activity increased seizure resistance in a dose-dependent manner. Our findings show that Drosophila single-cell expression data and behavior can aid functional validation of human GCNs and highlight a role for metabolism in modifying seizure susceptibility.
A conserved epilepsy-associated gene co-expression module identifies increased metabolic rate as a shared pathomechanism
Open Access
Present address: Institute of Human Genetics, UK Essen, University of Duisburg-Essen School of Medicine, 45147 Essen, Germany
- Award Group:
- Funder(s): China Scholarship Council
- Award Id(s): 201908440286
- Funder(s):
- Award Group:
- Funder(s): Radboud Universitair Medisch Centrum
- Funder(s):
- Award Group:
- Funder(s): ZonMw
- Award Id(s): 09150181910022
- Funder(s):
Jingyi Long, Spencer G. Jones, Ana Serna, Boyd van Reijmersdal, Franziska Kampshoff, Sara Aibar, Patrik Verstreken, Martijn A. Huynen, Kevin Lüthy, Mireia Coll-Tané, Annette Schenck; A conserved epilepsy-associated gene co-expression module identifies increased metabolic rate as a shared pathomechanism. Dis Model Mech 2025; dmm.052307. doi: https://doi.org/10.1242/dmm.052307
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