| Literature DB >> 32583268 |
Nadine J Ortner1, Teresa Kaserer2, J Nathan Copeland3, Jörg Striessnig4.
Abstract
The identification of rare disease-causing variants in humans by large-scale next-generation sequencing (NGS) studies has also provided us with new insights into the pathophysiological role of de novo missense variants in the CACNA1D gene that encodes the pore-forming α1-subunit of voltage-gated Cav1.3 L-type Ca2+ channels. These CACNA1D variants have been identified somatically in aldosterone-producing adenomas as well as germline in patients with neurodevelopmental and in some cases endocrine symptoms. In vitro studies in heterologous expression systems have revealed typical gating changes that indicate enhanced Ca2+ influx through Cav1.3 channels as the underlying disease-causing mechanism. Here we summarize the clinical findings of 12 well-characterized individuals with a total of 9 high-risk pathogenic CACNA1D variants. Moreover, we propose how information from somatic mutations in aldosterone-producing adenomas could be used to predict the potential pathogenicity of novel germline variants. Since these pathogenic de novo variants can cause a channel-gain-of function, we also discuss the use of L-type Ca2+ channel blockers as a potential therapeutic option.Entities:
Keywords: Autism spectrum disorders; CACNA1D; Calcium channel blockers; Neurodevelopmental disorders; Variants; Voltage-gated Ca2+ channels
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32583268 PMCID: PMC7351864 DOI: 10.1007/s00424-020-02418-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pflugers Arch ISSN: 0031-6768 Impact factor: 3.657
Voltage-gated Ca2+ channels: classification and human genetic diseases
| Family | Gene | Protein | Channelopathy | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HVA | Cav1 | Cav1.1 | Hypokalemic periodic paralysis type 1 Malignant hypothermia type 5 | |
| Cav1.2 | Brugada syndrome type 3 | |||
| Cav1.3 | Sinoatrial node dysfunction and deafness syndrome | |||
| Cav1.4 | Congenital stationary night blindness type 2 X-linked cone-rod dystrophy type 3 | |||
| Cav2 | Cav2.1 | Spinocerebellar ataxia type 6 Episodic ataxia type 2 | ||
| Cav2.2 | n.r. | |||
| Cav2.3 | ||||
| LVA | Cav3 | Cav3.1 | Autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia Juvenile myoclonus epilepsy | |
| Cav3.2 | Childhood absence epilepsy Autism spectrum disorder | |||
| Cav3.3 | Schizophrenia risk gene | |||
Human diseases caused by inherited and de novo (highlighted in bold font) missense Cav variants. For familial hemiplegic migraine type 1, both inherited and de novo disease-causing CACNA1A variants are described. HVA, high-voltage activated; LVA, low-voltage activated; n. r., not reported
Fig. 1Characteristic gating changes induced by high-risk pathogenic CACNA1D variants permitting enhanced channel function of Cav1.3 L-type Ca2+ channels (taken and modified from [66, 26]). Typical changes in the voltage dependence of activation (A+C) and inactivation (C) as well as inactivation kinetics during prolonged depolarizations (B+D) are shown for C-terminally short wild-type (black), G407R (red; type 1) and S652L Cav1.3 channels (turquoise; type 2). Note that for the almost non-inactivating G407R variant no steady-state inactivation curve was determined (A). The short Cav1.3 splice variant lacks an intramolecular interaction between the distal and proximal C-terminus which enhances its voltage-sensitivity and inactivation kinetics compared with full-length Cav1.3 channels [8, 77]; however, similar gating changes were also elicited in the long Cav1.3 variant [26, 64]
Classification of CACNA1D missense variants by characteristic functional changes
| Mutation | Occurrence | Functional changes | ISR sensitivity | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | G403D | Germline | Voltage-dependence of activation shifted to hyperpolarized voltages or unchanged | [ | |
| G403R | Somatic | [ | |||
| G407R | Germline | [ | |||
| 2 | V259D | Somatic | Inactivation not abolished (may be faster, slower, more or less complete after 5 s depolarization to Voltage-dependence of inactivation strongly shifted to hyperpolarized voltages or unchanged | [ | |
| V401L | Germline + somatic | HP -80 mV: enhanced (1.5-fold) HP -50 mV: unchanged | [ | ||
| S652L | Germline | HP -80 mV: enhanced (3-fold) | [ | ||
| F747L | Somatic | [ | |||
| A749G | Somatic | [ | |||
| I750M | Germline + somatic | [ | |||
| V1153G | Somatic | [ | |||
| 3 | Q547H* | Germline | No change in voltage-dependence of gating | [ | |
| P1336R | Somatic | [ | |||
| 4 | R990H | Somatic | [ |
Table taken and modified from [66]. Functional changes of Cav1.3 α1 variants were determined upon heterologous expression in mammalian cells (HEK293, tsA201) together with auxiliary β3 (or β1b and β2a in [41]) and α2δ-1 subunits. Isradipine sensitivity was measured using depolarizing standard square pulses to the Vmax (voltage of maximal activation) elicited from a holding potential (HP) of − 50 mV or − 80 mV as indicated. *Q547H: this homozygous variant is not a de novo variant and therefore not further discussed in this review
High-risk disease-causing de novo germline CACNA1D variants
| Case no. | Variant | Age first symptoms (sex) | ASD | Seizures | Limb spasticity | Hypotonia | Primary aldosteronism | Hypoglycemic hyperinsulinism | Intellectual impairment/disability | Sleep disorder | Autoaggression/self-injury | Developmental delay | Normal MRI | Birth complications | Other | Patho | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | G403D (ex 8B) | 1 month (f) | + | + | + | + | + | + | No | CS (36 weeks of gestation); high birth weight | Sinus bradycardia/biventricular hypertrophy, ventricular septum defect, patent foramen ovale; cortical blindness, cerebral palsy; transient hypoglycemia on day 2 | PS2, PS3, PS4, PM1, PM2, PM5 | [ | ||||
| 2 | G403D (ex 8B) | Birth (f) | (+) | + | + | + | + | + | + | High birth weight | At age 3 not ambulatory not verbal | [ | |||||
| 3 | I750M | Birth (f) | + | + | + | + | + | + | Yes | CS (41 weeks of gestation), resuscitation | Ventricular hypertrophy; cerebral palsy, spastic quadriplegia, movement disorder with verbal outbursts | PS2, PS3, PS4, PM1, PM2, PM5 | [ | ||||
| 4 | V259A | 1.5 month (m) | + | + | + | + | + | No | − | Facial dysmorphism microcephaly | PS2, PM1, PM2, PM5 | [ | |||||
| 5 | A749G | 8 years (f) | + | Normal EEG (year 2) | − | − | − | − | + | + | − | − | CS, floppy infant | Impaired motor skills, clumsy, uncoordinated, night incontinence | PS2, PS3, PM1, PM2 | [ | |
| 6 | G407R (ex 8A) | 15 years (m) | + | − | − | − | − | − | − | − | − | Yes | − | Anxiety, depression; | PS2, PS3, PM1, PM2 | [ | |
| 7 | V401L (ex 8A) | 4 months (m) | + | + | + | + | − | − | + | + | + | yes | − | PS2, PS3, PS4, PM1, PM2, PM5 | [ | ||
| 8 | S652L | Homozygotic twins (m) (current age 13) | + | + (no recurrence) | − | − | − | − | + | + | + | − | Undescended testes; facial dysmorphism | PS2, PS3, PS4, PM1, PM2 | [ | ||
| 9 | S652L | + | − | − | − | − | − | + | + | + | − | Facial dysmorphism | |||||
| 10 | A749T | 1 year (f) | + | − | − | + | − | − | + | + | + | + | − | Binocular vision disorder | PS2, PS4, PM1, PM2, PM5 | Unpublished, this review | |
| 11 | A749T | Details not reported | [ | ||||||||||||||
| 12 | L271H | Birth (f) | − | + | + | + | + | Born at 32 weeks of gestation | Maternal preeclampsia with HELLP syndrome; facial dysmorphism | PS2, PM1, PM2 | [ | ||||||
For classifying the pathogenicity (Patho) of the CACNA1D variants, we used the criteria proposed in the ACMG classification system [69]. For each of the variants, the combination of the criteria for PS (strong evidence for pathogenicity) and PM (defining moderate evidence for pathogenicity) is given. All variants can be considered “pathogenic” based on ACMG criteria, with the exception of L271H, which is considered “likely pathogenic.” However, as argued in the text, it should be considered a high-risk disease-causing de novo variant. ASD, autism spectrum disorder; CS, cesarean section; ex, exon; f, female; m, male; +, symptom reported; −, symptom reported to be absent
Fig. 2Scheme of the position of de novo germline and de novo somatic APA/APCC variants within the Cav1.3 α1-subunit. The α1-subunit consists of four homologous repeats (I–IV), each comprising six transmembrane segments (S1–S6). From each repeat, S1–S4 form the voltage sensors (S4 contains the positive gating charges) and S5–S6 with their connecting loop build the ion conducting pore. The S4–S5 loop links the voltage-sensor movements to the pore opening. Color code: germline (orange), somatic (blue)
Prediction of pathogenicity in novel germline CACNA1D variants using information from somatic mutations in APAs and APCCs
| Classification | Criteria |
|---|---|
| Pathogenic | If absent in controls and typical gating changes (Table |
| If absent in controls and has been described independently in at least | |
| If present in a single control, described independently in at least | |
| If absent in controls and has been described in only one adrenal but at least one additional variant (pathogenic/likely pathogenic) is described in the same position | |
| Likely pathogenic | If present in a single control and described independently in at least |
| If absent in controls and has been described in only one adrenal | |
| Likely benign | If present in more than 3 controls and only one adrenal |
| If the variant likely represents a null variant (loss of channel function, nonsense, frameshift, canonical ± 1 or 2 splice sites, initiation codon, single or multiexon deletion) | |
| Uncertain | If present in one control and described in only one adrenal |
| If present in more than one control and described in more than one adrenal |
The criteria listed in the table were used to classify the pathogenicity of somatic mutations in APAs and APCCs assuming that some of them cannot (yet) be considered pathogenic mutations causing high risk for disease based e.g. on the frequency of them being independently reported and their occurrence in healthy control individuals. Note that this classification should aid in predicting the potential pathogenicity of germline mutations for endocrine or neurodevelopmental syndromes associated with CACNA1D variants. In the absence of a suitable guideline for classifying the potential pathogenicity for somatic tumor mutations [38], we consider the here described criteria for classification of the pathogenicity of CACNA1D APA/APCC variants
Predicted pathogenicity of somatic CACNA1D variants reported in APAs and APCCs
| Position | Variant | Reference | Gating change | Times reported | Reported in gnomAD (#) | Pathogenicity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| E124 | E124K | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| Other gnomAD entries at this position: | E124Q (1×) E124D (3×) | |||||
| L248 | L248F | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| V259 | V259A | [ | - | 1× (germline) | - | |
| V259D | [ | Type-2 [3] | 3 | - | Pathogenic | |
| V259G | [ | - | 1 | - | Pathogenic | |
| L272 | L272R | [ | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic | |
| V309 | V309A | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| Other gnomAD entries at this position: | V309I (84×; HOM: 1×) | |||||
| G323 | G323R | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| V401 | V401L | [ | Type-2 [65] | 1× (germline) | - | |
| V401L | [ | Type-2 [65] | 4 (exon 8a) | - | Pathogenic | |
| G403 | G403D | [ | Type-1 [72] | 2× (germline) | - | |
| G403R | [ | Type-1 [3,72] | 54 (exon 8a: 32; 8b: 12; ns: 10) | - | Pathogenic | |
| Other gnomAD entries at this position: | G403dup (2×) loss of function, exon 8b [ | |||||
| S410 | S410L | [ | - | 2 | - | Pathogenic |
| E412 | E412D | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| G457 | G457R | [ | - | 1 | 1× | Uncertain |
| Other gnomAD entries at this position: | G457del (2×) | |||||
| R510 (R530) | R510 | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely benign |
| Other gnomAD entries at this position: | R510Q (2×) | |||||
| P548 (P568) | P548L | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| L613 (L633) | L613Q | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| R619 (R639) | R619P | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| R619W | [ | - | 1 | 1× | Uncertain | |
| S652 (S672) | S652L | [ | 2× (germline)* | - | ||
| S652L | [ | Type-2 [26] | 5 | - | Pathogenic | |
| Other gnomAD entries at this position: | S652W (3×)—no gating change [ | |||||
| L653 (L673) | L653P | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| L655 (L675) | L655P | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| Other gnomAD entries at this position: | L655F (1×) | |||||
| S724 (S744) | S724L | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| V728 (V748) | V728I | [ | - | 1 | 115× | Likely benign |
| Y741 (Y761) | Y741C | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| F747 (F767) | F747C | [ | - | 3 | - | Pathogenic |
| F747L | [ | Type-2 [66] | 21 | - | Pathogenic | |
| F747V | [ | - | 18 | - | Pathogenic | |
| L748 (L768) | L748S | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| I750 (I770) | I750M | [ | Type-2 [72] | 1× (germline) | - | |
| I750M | [ | Type-2 [72,3] | 11 | - | Pathogenic | |
| I750F | [ | - | 2 | - | Pathogenic | |
| V752 (V772) | V752G | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
755-757del (775-777del) | Deletion of “LAD’ | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| Other gnomAD entries at this position: | A756T (1×) | |||||
| S969 (S989) | S969L | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| V979 (V999) | V979D | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| Other gnomAD entries at this position: | V979I (1×) | |||||
| K981 (K1001) | K981N | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| R990 (R1010) | R990G | [ | - | 1 | - | Pathogenic |
| R990H | [ | Type-4 [52] | 9 | - | Pathogenic | |
| R993 (R1013) | R993T | [ | - | 3 | - | Pathogenic |
| R993S | [ | - | 1 | - | Pathogenic | |
| A998 (A1018) | A998I | [ | - | 3 | - | Pathogenic |
| A998V | [ | - | 9 | - | Pathogenic | |
| C1007 (C1027) | C1007R | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| A1011 (A1031) | A1011T | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| I1015 (I1035) | I1015S | [ | - | 1 | - | Pathogenic |
| I1015V | [ | - | 2 | - | Pathogenic | |
| F1147 (F1167) | F1147C | [ | - | 1 | - | Pathogenic |
| F1147L | [ | - | 2 | - | Pathogenic | |
| V1151 (V1171) | V1151F | [ | - | 3 | - | Pathogenic |
| I1152 (I1172) | I1152N | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| V1153 (V1173) | V1153G | [ | Type-2 [87] | 1 | - | Pathogenic |
| Other gnomAD entries at this position: | V1153I (3×) | |||||
| R1183 (R1203) | R1183H | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| Other gnomAD entries at this position: | R1183C (2×) | |||||
| F1248 (F1268) | F1248L | [ | - | 4 | - | Pathogenic |
| D1273 (D1293) | D1273N | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| P1336 (P1371) | P1336R | [ | Type-3 [3] | 4 | - | Pathogenic |
| V1338 (V1373) | V1338M | [ | - | 13 | - | Pathogenic |
| I1352 (I1387) | I1352T | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| M1354 (M1389) | M1354I | [ | No gating change [ | 2 | - | Pathogenic/uncertain# |
| P1499 (P1534) | P1499L | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| T1835 (T1879) | T1835I | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
| W1836 (W1880) | W1836 | [ | - | 1 | - | Likely pathogenic |
Criteria for the classification of the pathogenicity are given in Table 4. The reference CACNA1D sequence EU_363339 contains exon 8a but not exons 11, 32, 44 (gnomAD reference sequence NM_000720 contains exons 8b, 11, 32, and 44). If the residue position differs between the two sequences, the respective NM_000720 residue is given in parenthesis. HOM, homozygous; “X” indicates a STOP. *Monozygotic twins. ns, not specified; “-” indicates not measured (gating change) or not reported in gnomAD. #M1354I fulfills the here described criteria of a pathogenic variant, but no typical gating changes have been observed in functional studies [66]. The W1836X variant lacks the distal C-terminal regulatory domain (DCRD), which disrupts an automodulatory interaction with the proximal C-terminus (PCRD), thereby interfering with channel gating (enhanced Ca2+-dependent inactivation and voltage sensitivity). The premature stop in the R510X variant likely results in a truncated, non-functional channel (loss of function)
Fig. 3structural models. (A) A homology model of the inactivated state based on rabbit Cav1.1 (PDB entry 5gjv, [93]). Transmembrane segments of homologous repeats I (cyan) and II (blue) are shown with germline de novo missense variants highlighted as orange sticks. They spatially cluster around the activation gate formed by S6-helices of repeats I and II. (B) The homology model of the CACNA1D resting state (based on PDB entry 6p6w, [92]) shows that A749 and G403 (orange spheres) tightly interact with surrounding residues on the S5 helix and S4-S5 linker (highlighted as spheres). Cartoon and carbon atoms depicted as spheres are colored according to the homologous repeats, whereas nitrogen and oxygen atoms of residues depicted as spheres are colored blue and red, respectively. (C) The pore-forming helix S6 requires conformational rearrangements of the backbone to facilitate pore opening in the activated state (green cartoon) compared with the resting state (cyan cartoon). G407 (S6 in repeat I) is highlighted in orange (resting state) and yellow (activated state)
Fig. 4Modeling of the R619 variants. (A) R619 (orange sticks and highlighted by dotted lines) is the uppermost positively charged arginine in the VSD of repeat II. For reference, germline variants from Fig. 3A are shown as orange sticks as well. (B + C) Top view from the extracellular side onto the (B) wild-type R (orange sticks), and the W (green sticks) and (C) P (yellow sticks) variants in the Cav1.3 resting state model (gray). (D + E) In the resting state, both R619 (D, orange, highlighted by dotted lines) and the large hydrophobic side chain of the R619W variant (E, green, highlighted by dotted lines) provide a steric barrier that prevents ion leakage through the surface of the VSD (gray surface). (F) The R619P variant (yellow) lacks this large, hydrophobic sidechain, thus creating a tunnel via which ions can potentially pass through to the intracellular side. For comparison, this tunnel is depicted from both the top and bottom view