| Literature DB >> 25362483 |
Julian Schubert1, Aleksandra Siekierska2, Mélanie Langlois3, Patrick May4, Clément Huneau5, Felicitas Becker1, Hiltrud Muhle6, Arvid Suls7, Johannes R Lemke8, Carolien G F de Kovel9, Holger Thiele10, Kathryn Konrad10, Amit Kawalia10, Mohammad R Toliat10, Thomas Sander10, Franz Rüschendorf11, Almuth Caliebe12, Inga Nagel12, Bernard Kohl13, Angela Kecskés2, Maxime Jacmin3, Katia Hardies7, Sarah Weckhuysen7, Erik Riesch14, Thomas Dorn15, Eva H Brilstra9, Stephanie Baulac16, Rikke S Møller17, Helle Hjalgrim17, Bobby P C Koeleman9, Karin Jurkat-Rott18, Frank Lehman-Horn18, Jared C Roach19, Gustavo Glusman19, Leroy Hood19, David J Galas20, Benoit Martin5, Peter A M de Witte2, Saskia Biskup21, Peter De Jonghe7, Ingo Helbig6, Rudi Balling3, Peter Nürnberg22, Alexander D Crawford23, Camila V Esguerra24, Yvonne G Weber1, Holger Lerche1.
Abstract
Febrile seizures affect 2-4% of all children and have a strong genetic component. Recurrent mutations in three main genes (SCN1A, SCN1B and GABRG2) have been identified that cause febrile seizures with or without epilepsy. Here we report the identification of mutations in STX1B, encoding syntaxin-1B, that are associated with both febrile seizures and epilepsy. Whole-exome sequencing in independent large pedigrees identified cosegregating STX1B mutations predicted to cause an early truncation or an in-frame insertion or deletion. Three additional nonsense or missense mutations and a de novo microdeletion encompassing STX1B were then identified in 449 familial or sporadic cases. Video and local field potential analyses of zebrafish larvae with antisense knockdown of stx1b showed seizure-like behavior and epileptiform discharges that were highly sensitive to increased temperature. Wild-type human syntaxin-1B but not a mutated protein rescued the effects of stx1b knockdown in zebrafish. Our results thus implicate STX1B and the presynaptic release machinery in fever-associated epilepsy syndromes.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25362483 DOI: 10.1038/ng.3130
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 38.330