Abstract

Variants of the SCN1A gene encoding the neuronal voltage-gated sodium channel NaV1.1 cause over 85% of all cases of Dravet syndrome, a severe and often pharmacoresistent epileptic encephalopathy with mostly infantile onset. But with the increased availability of genetic testing for patients with epilepsy, variants in SCN1A have now also been described in a range of other epilepsy phenotypes. The vast majority of these epilepsy-associated variants are de novo, and most are either nonsense variants that truncate the channel or missense variants that are presumed to cause loss of channel function. However, biophysical analysis has revealed a significant subset of missense mutations that result in increased excitability, further complicating approaches to precision pharmacotherapy for patients with SCN1A variants and epilepsy. We describe clinical and biophysical data of a familial SCN1A variant encoding the NaV1.1 L1624Q mutant. This substitution is located on the extracellular linker between S3 and S4 of Domain IV of NaV1.1 and is a rare case of a familial SCN1A variant causing an autosomal dominant frontal lobe epilepsy. We expressed wild-type (WT) and L1642Q channels in CHO cells. Using patch-clamp to characterize channel properties at several temperatures, we show that the L1624Q variant increases persistent current, accelerates fast inactivation onset and decreases current density. While SCN1A-associated epilepsy is typically considered a loss-of-function disease, our results put L1624Q into a growing set of mixed gain and loss-of-function variants in SCN1A responsible for epilepsy.

Highlights

  • SCN1A encodes the alpha subunit of the neuronal voltage gated sodium channel NaV1.1 and variants of this gene are known to cause a variety of epilepsy phenotypes in humans

  • While most SCN1A-related epilepsies are typically considered a loss-offunction disease, our results put L1624Q into a growing set of mixed gain and loss-of-function variants in SCN1A responsible for early childhood epilepsy

  • The rates of fast inactivation onset in the L1624Q variant are significantly more sensitive to increases in temperature compared to WT channels (p 0.0089)

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Summary

Introduction

SCN1A encodes the alpha subunit of the neuronal voltage gated sodium channel NaV1.1 and variants of this gene are known to cause a variety of epilepsy phenotypes in humans. Voltage gated sodium channels are comprised of four homologous domains (DI-DIV) (Noda et al, 1984). The movement of the positively charged S4 segment toward the extracellular surface causes a conformational change that opens the pore, resulting in an influx of sodium (Kontis et al, 1997; Chanda and Bezanilla, 2002; Peters and Ruben, 2014). The intracellular loop connecting DIII and DIV (illustrated as h in Figure 1), moves to block the channel pore and prevent further sodium influx in a process termed fast inactivation (Marban et al, 1998)

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