Nav1.2 haplodeficiency in excitatory neurons causes absence-like seizures in mice

Ikuo Ogiwara(RIKEN Center for Brain Science), Hiroyuki Miyamoto(RIKEN Center for Brain Science), Tetsuya Tatsukawa(RIKEN Center for Brain Science), Tetsushi Yamagata(RIKEN Center for Brain Science), Tojo Nakayama(Boston Children's Hospital), Nafiseh Atapour(The Royal Melbourne Hospital), Eriko Miura(Keio University), Emi Mazaki(RIKEN Center for Brain Science), Sara J. Ernst(Baylor College of Medicine), Dezhi Cao(National Epilepsy Center), Hideyuki Ohtani(National Epilepsy Center), Shigeyoshi Itohara(RIKEN Center for Brain Science), Yuchio Yanagawa(Gunma University), M Montal(University of California San Diego), Michisuke Yuzaki(Keio University), Yushi Inoue(National Epilepsy Center), Takao K. Hensch(Boston Children's Hospital), Jeffrey L. Noebels(Baylor College of Medicine), Kazuhiro Yamakawa(RIKEN Center for Brain Science)
Communications Biology
July 13, 2018
Cited by 113Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Mutations in the SCN2A gene encoding a voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.2 are associated with epilepsies, intellectual disability, and autism. SCN2A gain-of-function mutations cause early-onset severe epilepsies, while loss-of-function mutations cause autism with milder and/or later-onset epilepsies. Here we show that both heterozygous Scn2a -knockout and knock-in mice harboring a patient-derived nonsense mutation exhibit ethosuximide-sensitive absence-like seizures associated with spike-and-wave discharges at adult stages. Unexpectedly, identical seizures are reproduced and even more prominent in mice with heterozygous Scn2a deletion specifically in dorsal-telencephalic (e.g., neocortical and hippocampal) excitatory neurons, but are undetected in mice with selective Scn2a deletion in inhibitory neurons. In adult cerebral cortex of wild-type mice, most Nav1.2 is expressed in excitatory neurons with a steady increase and redistribution from proximal (i.e., axon initial segments) to distal axons. These results indicate a pivotal role of Nav1.2 haplodeficiency in excitatory neurons in epilepsies of patients with SCN2A loss-of-function mutations.


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