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A Role of SCN9A in Human Epilepsies, As a Cause of Febrile Seizures and As a Potential Modifier of Dravet Syndrome

A follow-up study of a large Utah family with significant linkage to chromosome 2q24 led us to identify a new febrile seizure (FS) gene, SCN9A encoding Na(v)1.7. In 21 affected members, we uncovered a potential mutation in a highly conserved amino acid, p.N641Y, in the large cytoplasmic loop between...

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Autores principales: Singh, Nanda A., Pappas, Chris, Dahle, E. Jill, Claes, Lieve R. F., Pruess, Timothy H., De Jonghe, Peter, Thompson, Joel, Dixon, Missy, Gurnett, Christina, Peiffer, Andy, White, H. Steve, Filloux, Francis, Leppert, Mark F.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2730533/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19763161
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000649
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author Singh, Nanda A.
Pappas, Chris
Dahle, E. Jill
Claes, Lieve R. F.
Pruess, Timothy H.
De Jonghe, Peter
Thompson, Joel
Dixon, Missy
Gurnett, Christina
Peiffer, Andy
White, H. Steve
Filloux, Francis
Leppert, Mark F.
author_facet Singh, Nanda A.
Pappas, Chris
Dahle, E. Jill
Claes, Lieve R. F.
Pruess, Timothy H.
De Jonghe, Peter
Thompson, Joel
Dixon, Missy
Gurnett, Christina
Peiffer, Andy
White, H. Steve
Filloux, Francis
Leppert, Mark F.
author_sort Singh, Nanda A.
collection PubMed
description A follow-up study of a large Utah family with significant linkage to chromosome 2q24 led us to identify a new febrile seizure (FS) gene, SCN9A encoding Na(v)1.7. In 21 affected members, we uncovered a potential mutation in a highly conserved amino acid, p.N641Y, in the large cytoplasmic loop between transmembrane domains I and II that was absent from 586 ethnically matched population control chromosomes. To establish a functional role for this mutation in seizure susceptibility, we introduced the orthologous mutation into the murine Scn9a ortholog using targeted homologous recombination. Compared to wild-type mice, homozygous Scn9a (N641Y/N641Y) knockin mice exhibit significantly reduced thresholds to electrically induced clonic and tonic-clonic seizures, and increased corneal kindling acquisition rates. Together, these data strongly support the SCN9A p.N641Y mutation as disease-causing in this family. To confirm the role of SCN9A in FS, we analyzed a collection of 92 unrelated FS patients and identified additional highly conserved Na(v)1.7 missense variants in 5% of the patients. After one of these children with FS later developed Dravet syndrome (severe myoclonic epilepsy of infancy), we sequenced the SCN1A gene, a gene known to be associated with Dravet syndrome, and identified a heterozygous frameshift mutation. Subsequent analysis of 109 Dravet syndrome patients yielded nine Na(v)1.7 missense variants (8% of the patients), all in highly conserved amino acids. Six of these Dravet syndrome patients with SCN9A missense variants also harbored either missense or splice site SCN1A mutations and three had no SCN1A mutations. This study provides evidence for a role of SCN9A in human epilepsies, both as a cause of FS and as a partner with SCN1A mutations.
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spelling pubmed-27305332009-09-18 A Role of SCN9A in Human Epilepsies, As a Cause of Febrile Seizures and As a Potential Modifier of Dravet Syndrome Singh, Nanda A. Pappas, Chris Dahle, E. Jill Claes, Lieve R. F. Pruess, Timothy H. De Jonghe, Peter Thompson, Joel Dixon, Missy Gurnett, Christina Peiffer, Andy White, H. Steve Filloux, Francis Leppert, Mark F. PLoS Genet Research Article A follow-up study of a large Utah family with significant linkage to chromosome 2q24 led us to identify a new febrile seizure (FS) gene, SCN9A encoding Na(v)1.7. In 21 affected members, we uncovered a potential mutation in a highly conserved amino acid, p.N641Y, in the large cytoplasmic loop between transmembrane domains I and II that was absent from 586 ethnically matched population control chromosomes. To establish a functional role for this mutation in seizure susceptibility, we introduced the orthologous mutation into the murine Scn9a ortholog using targeted homologous recombination. Compared to wild-type mice, homozygous Scn9a (N641Y/N641Y) knockin mice exhibit significantly reduced thresholds to electrically induced clonic and tonic-clonic seizures, and increased corneal kindling acquisition rates. Together, these data strongly support the SCN9A p.N641Y mutation as disease-causing in this family. To confirm the role of SCN9A in FS, we analyzed a collection of 92 unrelated FS patients and identified additional highly conserved Na(v)1.7 missense variants in 5% of the patients. After one of these children with FS later developed Dravet syndrome (severe myoclonic epilepsy of infancy), we sequenced the SCN1A gene, a gene known to be associated with Dravet syndrome, and identified a heterozygous frameshift mutation. Subsequent analysis of 109 Dravet syndrome patients yielded nine Na(v)1.7 missense variants (8% of the patients), all in highly conserved amino acids. Six of these Dravet syndrome patients with SCN9A missense variants also harbored either missense or splice site SCN1A mutations and three had no SCN1A mutations. This study provides evidence for a role of SCN9A in human epilepsies, both as a cause of FS and as a partner with SCN1A mutations. Public Library of Science 2009-09-18 /pmc/articles/PMC2730533/ /pubmed/19763161 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000649 Text en Singh et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Singh, Nanda A.
Pappas, Chris
Dahle, E. Jill
Claes, Lieve R. F.
Pruess, Timothy H.
De Jonghe, Peter
Thompson, Joel
Dixon, Missy
Gurnett, Christina
Peiffer, Andy
White, H. Steve
Filloux, Francis
Leppert, Mark F.
A Role of SCN9A in Human Epilepsies, As a Cause of Febrile Seizures and As a Potential Modifier of Dravet Syndrome
title A Role of SCN9A in Human Epilepsies, As a Cause of Febrile Seizures and As a Potential Modifier of Dravet Syndrome
title_full A Role of SCN9A in Human Epilepsies, As a Cause of Febrile Seizures and As a Potential Modifier of Dravet Syndrome
title_fullStr A Role of SCN9A in Human Epilepsies, As a Cause of Febrile Seizures and As a Potential Modifier of Dravet Syndrome
title_full_unstemmed A Role of SCN9A in Human Epilepsies, As a Cause of Febrile Seizures and As a Potential Modifier of Dravet Syndrome
title_short A Role of SCN9A in Human Epilepsies, As a Cause of Febrile Seizures and As a Potential Modifier of Dravet Syndrome
title_sort role of scn9a in human epilepsies, as a cause of febrile seizures and as a potential modifier of dravet syndrome
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2730533/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19763161
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1000649
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