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  • Genetically encoded impairment of neuronal KCC2 cotransporter function in human idiopathic generalized epilepsy.

Genetically encoded impairment of neuronal KCC2 cotransporter function in human idiopathic generalized epilepsy.

EMBO reports (2014-06-15)
Kristopher T Kahle, Nancy D Merner, Perrine Friedel, Liliya Silayeva, Bo Liang, Arjun Khanna, Yuze Shang, Pamela Lachance-Touchette, Cynthia Bourassa, Annie Levert, Patrick A Dion, Brian Walcott, Dan Spiegelman, Alexandre Dionne-Laporte, Alan Hodgkinson, Philip Awadalla, Hamid Nikbakht, Jacek Majewski, Patrick Cossette, Tarek Z Deeb, Stephen J Moss, Igor Medina, Guy A Rouleau
ABSTRACT

The KCC2 cotransporter establishes the low neuronal Cl(-) levels required for GABAA and glycine (Gly) receptor-mediated inhibition, and KCC2 deficiency in model organisms results in network hyperexcitability. However, no mutations in KCC2 have been documented in human disease. Here, we report two non-synonymous functional variants in human KCC2, R952H and R1049C, exhibiting clear statistical association with idiopathic generalized epilepsy (IGE). These variants reside in conserved residues in the KCC2 cytoplasmic C-terminus, exhibit significantly impaired Cl(-)-extrusion capacities resulting in less hyperpolarized Gly equilibrium potentials (EG ly), and impair KCC2 stimulatory phosphorylation at serine 940, a key regulatory site. These data describe a novel KCC2 variant significantly associated with a human disease and suggest genetically encoded impairment of KCC2 functional regulation may be a risk factor for the development of human IGE.