Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/29180
Title: Lethal digenic mutations in the K+ 1 channels Kir4.1 (KCNJ10) and SLACK 2 (KCNT1) associated with severe-disabling seizures and neurodevelopmental delay
Authors: Hasan, Sonia M.
Balobaid, Ameera
Grottesi, Alessandro
Dabbagh, Omar
Cenciarini, Marta
Rawashdeh, Rifaat
Al-Sagheir, Afaf
Bove, Cecilia
Macchioni, Lara
Pessia, Mauro
Al-Owain, Mohammed A.
D'Adamo, Maria Cristina
Keywords: Ataxia -- Genetic aspects
Potassium channels
Ataxia
Issue Date: 2017
Publisher: American Psychological Association
Citation: Hasan, S., Balobaid, A., Grottesi, A., Dabbagh, O., Cenciarini, M., Rawashdeh, R.,...D’Adamo, M.C. (2017). Lethal digenic mutations in the K+ channels Kir4. 1 (KCNJ10) and SLACK (KCNT1) associated with severe-disabling seizures and neurodevelopmental delay. Journal of Neurophysiology, 118(4), 2402-2411.
Abstract: A 2-yr-old boy presented profound developmental delay, failure to thrive, ataxia, hypotonia, and tonic-clonic seizures that caused the death of the patient. Targeted and whole exome sequencing revealed two heterozygous missense variants: a novel mutation in the KCNJ10gene that encodes for the inward-rectifying K+ channel Kir4.1 and another previously characterized mutation in KCNT1 that encodes for the Na+-activated K+ channel known as Slo2.2 or SLACK. The objectives of this study were to perform the clinical and genetic characterization of the proband and his family and to examine the functional consequence of the Kir4.1 mutation. The mutant and wild-type KCNJ10 constructs were generated and heterologously expressed in Xenopus laevis oocytes, and whole cell K+ currents were measured using the two-electrode voltage-clamp technique. The KCNJ10 mutation c.652C>T resulted in a p.L218F substitution at a highly conserved residue site. Wild-type KCNJ10 expression yielded robust Kir current, whereas currents from oocytes expressing the mutation were reduced, remarkably. Western Blot analysis revealed reduced protein expression by the mutation. Kir5.1 subunits display selective heteromultimerization with Kir4.1 constituting channels with unique kinetics. The effect of the mutation on Kir4.1/5.1 channel activity was twofold: a reduction in current amplitudes and an increase in the pH-dependent inhibition. We thus report a novel loss-of-function mutation in Kir4.1 found in a patient with a coexisting mutation in SLACK channels that results in a fatal disease.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar//handle/123456789/29180
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