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CACNA1I gain-of-function mutations differentially affect channel gating and cause neurodevelopmental disorders

Authors :
Petronel Tuluc
Pauline E. Schneeberger
Monica L. Fernández-Quintero
Jonas Denecke
Simone Pelizzari
Kerstin Kutsche
Cathy A. Stevens
Marta Campiglio
Richard E. Person
Yousra El Ghaleb
Stefan Rentas
Klaus R. Liedl
Eric D. Marsh
Stefanie M Geisler
Laura K. Conlin
Abeltje M. Polstra
Bernhard E. Flucher
Johanna M. van Hagen
Human Genetics
ARD - Amsterdam Reproduction and Development
Human genetics
Amsterdam Reproduction & Development (AR&D)
Source :
Brain, 144(7), 2092-2106. Oxford University Press, El Ghaleb, Y, Schneeberger, P E, Fernández-Quintero, M L, Geisler, S M, Pelizzari, S, Polstra, A M, Van Hagen, J M, Denecke, J, Campiglio, M, Liedl, K R, Stevens, C A, Person, R E, Rentas, S, Marsh, E D, Conlin, L K, Tuluc, P, Kutsche, K & Flucher, B E 2021, ' CACNA1I gain-of-function mutations differentially affect channel gating and cause neurodevelopmental disorders ', Brain, vol. 144, no. 7, pp. 2092-2106 . https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awab101, https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awab101, Brain
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

T-type calcium channels (Cav3.1 to Cav3.3) regulate low-threshold calcium spikes, burst firing and rhythmic oscillations of neurons and are involved in sensory processing, sleep, and hormone and neurotransmitter release. Here, we examined four heterozygous missense variants in CACNA1I, encoding the Cav3.3 channel, in patients with variable neurodevelopmental phenotypes. The p.(Ile860Met) variant, affecting a residue in the putative channel gate at the cytoplasmic end of the IIS6 segment, was identified in three family members with variable cognitive impairment. The de novo p.(Ile860Asn) variant, changing the same amino acid residue, was detected in a patient with severe developmental delay and seizures. In two additional individuals with global developmental delay, hypotonia, and epilepsy, the variants p.(Ile1306Thr) and p.(Met1425Ile), substituting residues at the cytoplasmic ends of IIIS5 and IIIS6, respectively, were found. Because structure modelling indicated that the amino acid substitutions differentially affect the mobility of the channel gate, we analysed possible effects on Cav3.3 channel function using patch-clamp analysis in HEK293T cells. The mutations resulted in slowed kinetics of current activation, inactivation, and deactivation, and in hyperpolarizing shifts of the voltage-dependence of activation and inactivation, with Cav3.3-I860N showing the strongest and Cav3.3-I860M the weakest effect. Structure modelling suggests that by introducing stabilizing hydrogen bonds the mutations slow the kinetics of the channel gate and cause the gain-of-function effect in Cav3.3 channels. The gating defects left-shifted and increased the window currents, resulting in increased calcium influx during repetitive action potentials and even at resting membrane potentials. Thus, calcium toxicity in neurons expressing the Cav3.3 variants is one likely cause of the neurodevelopmental phenotype. Computer modelling of thalamic reticular nuclei neurons indicated that the altered gating properties of the Cav3.3 disease variants lower the threshold and increase the duration and frequency of action potential firing. Expressing the Cav3.3-I860N/M mutants in mouse chromaffin cells shifted the mode of firing from low-threshold spikes and rebound burst firing with wild-type Cav3.3 to slow oscillations with Cav3.3-I860N and an intermediate firing mode with Cav3.3-I860M, respectively. Such neuronal hyper-excitability could explain seizures in the patient with the p.(Ile860Asn) mutation. Thus, our study implicates CACNA1I gain-of-function mutations in neurodevelopmental disorders, with a phenotypic spectrum ranging from borderline intellectual functioning to a severe neurodevelopmental disorder with epilepsy.<br />T-type calcium channels regulate neuronal firing, are implicated in brain disease and are targets for anti-epileptic drugs. El Ghaleb et al. identify heterozygous missense variants of CACNA1I associated with variable neurodevelopmental disorders and epilepsy, and show how gain-of-function mutations cause hyper-excitability.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00068950
Volume :
144
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9bbb49e6049f2362f7ea16d06a8da98f