| Literature DB >> 31513310 |
Claire Bar1,2,3, Giulia Barcia2,3,4, Mélanie Jennesson5, Gwenaël Le Guyader6,7, Amy Schneider8, Cyril Mignot9,10, Gaetan Lesca11,12, Delphine Breuillard1, Martino Montomoli13, Boris Keren10, Diane Doummar14, Thierry Billette de Villemeur14, Alexandra Afenjar15, Isabelle Marey10, Marion Gerard16, Hervé Isnard17, Alice Poisson18, Sophie Dupont9,19, Patrick Berquin20, Pierre Meyer21,22, David Genevieve23, Anne De Saint Martin24, Salima El Chehadeh25, Jamel Chelly25, Agnès Guët26, Emmanuel Scalais27, Nathalie Dorison28, Candace T Myers29, Heather C Mefford30, Katherine B Howell31,32, Carla Marini13, Jeremy L Freeman31,32, Anca Nica33, Gaetano Terrone34, Tayeb Sekhara35, Anne-Sophie Lebre36, Sylvie Odent37,38, Lynette G Sadleir39, Arnold Munnich3,4, Renzo Guerrini13, Ingrid E Scheffer8,31,40, Edor Kabashi2,3, Rima Nabbout1,2,3.
Abstract
Developmental and epileptic encephalopathies (DEE) refer to a heterogeneous group of devastating neurodevelopmental disorders. Variants in KCNB1 have been recently reported in patients with early-onset DEE. KCNB1 encodes the α subunit of the delayed rectifier voltage-dependent potassium channel Kv 2.1. We review the 37 previously reported patients carrying 29 distinct KCNB1 variants and significantly expand the mutational spectrum describing 18 novel variants from 27 unreported patients. Most variants occur de novo and mainly consist of missense variants located on the voltage sensor and the pore domain of Kv 2.1. We also report the first inherited variant (p.Arg583*). KCNB1-related encephalopathies encompass a wide spectrum of neurodevelopmental disorders with predominant language difficulties and behavioral impairment. Eighty-five percent of patients developed epilepsies with variable syndromes and prognosis. Truncating variants in the C-terminal domain are associated with a less-severe epileptic phenotype. Overall, this report provides an up-to-date review of the mutational and clinical spectrum of KCNB1, strengthening its place as a causal gene in DEEs and emphasizing the need for further functional studies to unravel the underlying mechanisms.Entities:
Keywords: KCNB1; developmental and epileptic encephalopathy; epilepsy; potassium channel
Mesh:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31513310 DOI: 10.1002/humu.23915
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.878