| Literature DB >> 24108130 |
Anna Bode1, Sian-Elin Wood2, Jonathan G L Mullins2, Angelo Keramidas1, Thomas D Cushion2, Rhys H Thomas3, William O Pickrell3, Cheney J G Drew3, Amira Masri4, Elizabeth A Jones5, Grace Vassallo6, Alfred P Born7, Fusun Alehan8, Sharon Aharoni9, Gerald Bannasch10, Marius Bartsch11, Bulent Kara12, Amanda Krause13, Elie G Karam14, Stephanie Matta14, Vivek Jain15, Hanna Mandel16, Michael Freilinger17, Gail E Graham18, Emma Hobson19, Sue Chatfield20, Catherine Vincent-Delorme21, Jubran E Rahme22, Zaid Afawi23, Samuel F Berkovic24, Owain W Howell3, Jean-François Vanbellinghen25, Mark I Rees3, Seo-Kyung Chung3, Joseph W Lynch26.
Abstract
Hyperekplexia is a syndrome of readily provoked startle responses, alongside episodic and generalized hypertonia, that presents within the first month of life. Inhibitory glycine receptors are pentameric ligand-gated ion channels with a definitive and clinically well stratified linkage to hyperekplexia. Most hyperekplexia cases are caused by mutations in the α1 subunit of the human glycine receptor (hGlyR) gene (GLRA1). Here we analyzed 68 new unrelated hyperekplexia probands for GLRA1 mutations and identified 19 mutations, of which 9 were novel. Electrophysiological analysis demonstrated that the dominant mutations p.Q226E, p.V280M, and p.R414H induced spontaneous channel activity, indicating that this is a recurring mechanism in hGlyR pathophysiology. p.Q226E, at the top of TM1, most likely induced tonic activation via an enhanced electrostatic attraction to p.R271 at the top of TM2, suggesting a structural mechanism for channel activation. Receptors incorporating p.P230S (which is heterozygous with p.R65W) desensitized much faster than wild type receptors and represent a new TM1 site capable of modulating desensitization. The recessive mutations p.R72C, p.R218W, p.L291P, p.D388A, and p.E375X precluded cell surface expression unless co-expressed with α1 wild type subunits. The recessive p.E375X mutation resulted in subunit truncation upstream of the TM4 domain. Surprisingly, on the basis of three independent assays, we were able to infer that p.E375X truncated subunits are incorporated into functional hGlyRs together with unmutated α1 or α1 plus β subunits. These aberrant receptors exhibit significantly reduced glycine sensitivity. To our knowledge, this is the first suggestion that subunits lacking TM4 domains might be incorporated into functional pentameric ligand-gated ion channel receptors.Entities:
Keywords: Chloride Channels; Cys-Loop Receptors; Glycine Receptors; Neurological Diseases; Patch Clamp Electrophysiology
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24108130 PMCID: PMC3837119 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M113.509240
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157