| Literature DB >> 26029160 |
Jacy L Wagnon1, Miriam H Meisler1.
Abstract
Mutations of the voltage-gated sodium channel SCN8A have been identified in approximately 1% of nearly 1,500 children with early-infantile epileptic encephalopathies (EIEE) who have been tested by DNA sequencing. EIEE caused by mutation of SCN8A is designated EIEE13 (OMIM #614558). Affected children have seizure onset before 18 months of age as well as developmental and cognitive disabilities, movement disorders, and a high incidence of sudden death (SUDEP). EIEE13 is caused by de novo missense mutations of evolutionarily conserved residues in the Nav1.6 channel protein. One-third of the mutations are recurrent, and many occur at CpG dinucleotides. In this review, we discuss the effect of pathogenic mutations on the structure of the channel protein, the rate of recurrent mutation, and changes in channel function underlying this devastating disorder.Entities:
Keywords: CpG; Dravet syndrome; SUDEP; epilepsy; mutation; seizures; sodium channel
Year: 2015 PMID: 26029160 PMCID: PMC4432670 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2015.00104
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Reported drug response in epileptic encephalopathy due to .
| Amino acid substitution | Channel domain | Effect on function | Effective treatment | Seizure response | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| p.Val216Asp | DIS3-4 | Seizure control | ( | ||
| p.Leu407Phe | DIS6 | 75% reduction | ( | ||
| p.Phe846Ser | DIIS4 | Temporarily effective | ( | ||
| p.Ala890Thr | DIIS5 | Seizure control | ( | ||
| p.Asn984Lys | Near DIIS6 | GOF | Seizure control | ( | |
| p.Ile1327Val | DIIIS4-5 | High | Temporarily effective | ( | |
| p.Gly1451Ser | DIIIS6 | LOF | Seizure control | ( | |
| p.Asn1466Lys | Inactivation gate | Temporarily effective | ( | ||
| p.Asn1466Thr | Inactivation gate | Seizure control | ( | ||
| p.Val1592Leu | DIVS3 | Seizure control | ( | ||
| p.Ser1596Cys | DIVS3 | 75% reduction | ( | ||
| p.Ile1605Arg | DIVS3 | Seizure control | ( | ||
| p.Arg1617Gln | DIVS4 | Temp. effective | ( | ||
| Seizure control | |||||
| p.Ala1650Thr | DIVS4-5 | Seizure control | ( | ||
| p.Asn1768Asp | DIVS6 | GOF | Temporarily effective | ( | |
| p.Arg1872Trp | C-term | Febrile breakthrough | ( |
ACTH, adrenocorticotropic hormone; CBZ, carbamazepine; CLB, clobazam; GBP, gabapentin; KD, ketogenic diet; LCM, lacosamide; LD, lidocaine; LEV, levetiracetam; LTG, lamotrigine; MDL, midazolam; OXC, oxcarbazepine; PB, phenobarbital; PHT, phenytoin; TPM, topiramate; VGB, vigabatrin; VNS, vagal nerve stimulator; VPA, valproic acid; ZNS, zonisamide. Drugs classified as sodium channel blockers are indicated in bold.
Phenotypic variability in patients with the p.Arg1617Gln mutation in .
| Patient | Age of onset | Seizure type | Developmental progression | EEG | Drug response | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 3 months | Febrile seizures, tonic–clonic | Sat, crawled 24 months | Normal at 3 months | CBZ temp. effective | ( |
| 2 | 5.5 months | Generalized tonic–clonic, tonic, clonic, myoclonic, atypical absence | Hypotonia, wheelchair-bound, no speech, SUDEP at 3 years | Bilateral delta slowing and left temporal spikes and/or slow waves | Refractory | ( |
| 3 | 6 months | Generalized tonic | Head control 7 months., sat 12 months | Normal at 11 months, spike and spike–wave complexes in left rolandic at 3 years | OXC effective | ( |
| 4 | 7 months | Generalized tonic–clonic | Spasticity, sat 8 months, walked 17 months, speech 24 months | Not described | No details | ( |
| 5 | 12 months | Generalized tonic–clonic | Not described | Suggested anterior midline-frontal onset | Refractory | ( |
Figure 1Positions of missense mutations of . The four homologous domains of Nav1.6 (DI to DIV) each contain six transmembrane segments (S1 to S6). The large inter-domain cytoplasmic loops 1 and 2 are evolutionarily less well-conserved than the transmembrane and linker domains. Loop 3 functions as the inactivation gate and is very highly conserved. Closed symbols, EIEE13 mutations in a single patient; open symbols, recurrent mutations.
Recurrent .
| Amino acid substitution | Nucleotide substitution | Exon | Channel domain | CpG | # | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| p.Asn215Asp | c.643 A > G | 6A | DIS3 | No | 2 | DECIPHER 2015 ( |
| p.Ala890Thr | c.2668 G > A | 16 | DIIS5 | No | 2 | ( |
| p.Ile1327Val | c.3979 A > G | 22 | DIIIS4-5 | No | 2 | ( |
| p.Arg1617Gln | c.4850 G > A | 27 | DIVS4 | Yes | 5 | ( |
| p.Ala1650Thr | c.4948 G > A | 27 | DIVS4-5 | No | 2 | ( |
| p.Arg1872Trp | c.5614 C > T | 27 | C-term | Yes | 9 | ( |
| p.Arg1872Gln | c.5615G > A | |||||
| p.Arg1872Leu | c.5615 G > T |
Figure 2Mechanism for recurrent mutation of . Arginine 1617 is encoded by a CGA codon, and arginine 1872 is encoded by a CGG codon. Both contain CpG dinucleotides on coding and non-coding strands (small arrows). Cytosine methylation followed by deamination on either strand leads to mutation: at arginine 1617, replacement by the premature termination codon (TGA, Ter) or glutamine (Gln); at arginine 1872, replacement by tryptophan (Trp) or glutamine (Gln). The premature termination mutation p.Arg1617Ter has not been seen in EIEE13 patients, and would probably not cause seizures (see text).
Figure 3Differential distribution of pathogenic and non-pathogenic variants in the protein domains of . Mutations of patients with EIEE13 are compared with variation in the ExAC database (exac.broadinstitute.org, accessed 04/2015), which excludes severe pediatric disease. Each amino acid substitution was counted once. Data were available for 43 mutations in EIEE13 patients and 228 variants from the ExAC database. Filled bars, EIEE13 patients; open bars, ExAC controls; Inact. gate, inactivation gate.
Functional effects of five .
| Amino acid substitution | Channel domain | Cell assay | Effect on function | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| p.Arg223Gly | DIS4 | HEK | Partial LOF, protein unstable at 37°C | ( |
| p.Thr767Ile | DIIS1 | ND7/23 | GOF, hyperpolarizing shift in activation voltage | ( |
| p.Asn984Lys | Near DIIS6 | HEK | GOF, hyperpolarizing shift in activation voltage | ( |
| p.Gly1451Ser | DIIIS6 | HEK | LOF, no activity at 37°C | ( |
| p.Asn1768Asp | DIVS6 | ND7/23 | GOF, increased persistent current | ( |