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Plural molecular and cellular mechanisms of pore domain KCNQ2 encephalopathy.

Timothy J AbreoEmma C ThompsonAnuraag MadabushiHeun SohNissi VargheseCarlos G VanoyeKristen SpringerKristen L ParkJim JohnsonScotty SimsZhigang JiAna G ChavezMiranda J JankovicBereket HabteAamir ZuberiCathleen LutzZhao WangVaishnav KrishnanLisa DudlerStephanie Einsele-ScholzJeffrey L NoebelsAlfred L GeorgeAtul MaheshwariAnastasios V TzingounisEdward C Cooper
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
KCNQ2 variants in children with neurodevelopmental impairment are difficult to assess due to their heterogeneity and unclear pathogenic mechanisms. We describe a child with neonatal-onset epilepsy, developmental impairment of intermediate severity, and KCNQ2 G256W heterozygosity. Analyzing prior KCNQ2 channel cryoelectron microscopy models revealed G256 as keystone of an arch-shaped non-covalent bond network linking S5, the pore turret, and the ion path. Co-expression with G256W dominantly suppressed conduction by wild-type subunits in heterologous cells. Ezogabine partly reversed this suppression. G256W/+ mice have epilepsy leading to premature deaths. Hippocampal CA1 pyramidal cells from G256W/+ brain slices showed hyperexcitability. G256W/+ pyramidal cell KCNQ2 and KCNQ3 immunolabeling was significantly shifted from axon initial segments to neuronal somata. Despite normal mRNA levels, G256W/+ mouse KCNQ2 protein levels were reduced by about 50%. Our findings indicate that G256W pathogenicity results from multiplicative effects, including reductions in intrinsic conduction, subcellular targeting, and protein stability. These studies reveal pore "turret arch" bonding as a KCNQ structural novelty and introduce a valid animal model of KCNQ2 encephalopathy. Our results, spanning structure to behavior, may be broadly applicable because the majority of KCNQ2 encephalopathy patients share variants near the selectivity filter.
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