| Literature DB >> 33242881 |
Fanny Mochel1,2, Agnès Rastetter1, Berten Ceulemans3, Konrad Platzer4, Sandra Yang5, Deepali N Shinde6, Katherine L Helbig7,8, Diego Lopergolo9,10, Francesca Mari9,10, Alessandra Renieri9,10, Elisa Benetti11, Roberto Canitano12, Quinten Waisfisz13, Astrid S Plomp13, Sylvia A Huisman14,15, Golder N Wilson16, Sara S Cathey17, Raymond J Louie18, Daniela Del Gaudio18, Darrel Waggoner18, Shawn Kacker19, Kimberly M Nugent20,21, Elizabeth R Roeder20,21, Ange-Line Bruel22,23, Julien Thevenon24,25, Nadja Ehmke26, Denise Horn26, Manuel Holtgrewe27, Frank J Kaiser28, Susanne B Kamphausen29, Rami Abou Jamra4, Sarah Weckhuysen30,31,32, Carine Dalle1, Christel Depienne1,28.
Abstract
KCNN2 encodes the small conductance calcium-activated potassium channel 2 (SK2). Rodent models with spontaneous Kcnn2 mutations show abnormal gait and locomotor activity, tremor and memory deficits, but human disorders related to KCNN2 variants are largely unknown. Using exome sequencing, we identified a de novo KCNN2 frameshift deletion in a patient with learning disabilities, cerebellar ataxia and white matter abnormalities on brain MRI. This discovery prompted us to collect data from nine additional patients with de novo KCNN2 variants (one nonsense, one splice site, six missense variants and one in-frame deletion) and one family with a missense variant inherited from the affected mother. We investigated the functional impact of six selected variants on SK2 channel function using the patch-clamp technique. All variants tested but one, which was reclassified to uncertain significance, led to a loss-of-function of SK2 channels. Patients with KCNN2 variants had motor and language developmental delay, intellectual disability often associated with early-onset movement disorders comprising cerebellar ataxia and/or extrapyramidal symptoms. Altogether, our findings provide evidence that heterozygous variants, likely causing a haploinsufficiency of the KCNN2 gene, lead to novel autosomal dominant neurodevelopmental movement disorders mirroring phenotypes previously described in rodents.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990 KCNN2zzm321990 ; SK2 channel; ataxia; developmental delay; tremor
Year: 2020 PMID: 33242881 DOI: 10.1093/brain/awaa346
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain ISSN: 0006-8950 Impact factor: 13.501