| Literature DB >> 35293990 |
Shehrazade Dahimene1, Leonie von Elsner2, Tess Holling2, Lauren S Mattas3, Jess Pickard1, Davor Lessel2, Kjara S Pilch1, Ivan Kadurin1, Wendy S Pratt1, Igor B Zhulin4, Hongzheng Dai5, Maja Hempel2, Maura R Z Ruzhnikov3, Kerstin Kutsche2, Annette C Dolphin1.
Abstract
Voltage-gated calcium (CaV) channels form three subfamilies (CaV1-3). The CaV1 and CaV2 channels are heteromeric, consisting of an α1 pore-forming subunit, associated with auxiliary CaVβ and α2δ subunits. The α2δ subunits are encoded in mammals by four genes, CACNA2D1-4. They play important roles in trafficking and function of the CaV channel complexes. Here we report biallelic variants in CACNA2D1, encoding the α2δ-1 protein, in two unrelated individuals showing a developmental and epileptic encephalopathy. Patient 1 has a homozygous frameshift variant c.818_821dup/p.(Ser275Asnfs*13) resulting in nonsense-mediated mRNA decay of the CACNA2D1 transcripts, and absence of α2δ-1 protein detected in patient-derived fibroblasts. Patient 2 is compound heterozygous for an early frameshift variant c.13_23dup/p.(Leu9Alafs*5), highly probably representing a null allele and a missense variant c.626G>A/p.(Gly209Asp). Our functional studies show that this amino-acid change severely impairs the function of α2δ-1 as a calcium channel subunit, with strongly reduced trafficking of α2δ-1G209D to the cell surface and a complete inability of α2δ-1G209D to increase the trafficking and function of CaV2 channels. Thus, biallelic loss-of-function variants in CACNA2D1 underlie the severe neurodevelopmental disorder in these two patients. Our results demonstrate the critical importance and non-interchangeability of α2δ-1 and other α2δ proteins for normal human neuronal development.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990 CACNA2D1zzm321990 ; biallelic variants; calcium channel; epileptic encephalopathy; loss-of-function
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35293990 PMCID: PMC9420018 DOI: 10.1093/brain/awac081
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain ISSN: 0006-8950 Impact factor: 15.255