A Potassium Channel Mutation in Neonatal Human Epilepsy

Christian Biervert(University of Bonn), Björn C. Schroeder(University of Bonn), Christian Kubisch(University of Bonn), Samuel F. Berkovic(University of Bonn), Peter Propping(University of Bonn), Thomas J. Jentsch(University of Bonn), Ortrud K. Steinlein(University of Bonn)
Science
January 16, 1998
Cited by 1,079

Abstract

Benign familial neonatal convulsions (BFNC) is an autosomal dominant epilepsy of infancy, with loci mapped to human chromosomes 20q13.3 and 8q24. By positional cloning, a potassium channel gene (KCNQ2) located on 20q13.3 was isolated and found to be expressed in brain. Expression of KCNQ2 in frog (Xenopus laevis) oocytes led to potassium-selective currents that activated slowly with depolarization. In a large pedigree with BFNC, a five-base pair insertion would delete more than 300 amino acids from the KCNQ2 carboxyl terminus. Expression of the mutant channel did not yield measurable currents. Thus, impairment of potassium-dependent repolarization is likely to cause this age-specific epileptic syndrome.


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