3 research outputs found
A novel KCNQ3 mutation in familial epilepsy with focal seizures and intellectual disability
Mutations in the KCNQ2 gene encoding for voltage-gated potassium channel subunits have been
found in patients affected with early-onset epilepsies with wide phenotypic expression, ranging
from Benign Familial Neonatal Seizures (BFNS) to epileptic encephalopathy with cognitive
impairment, drug resistance, and characteristic EEG and neuroradiological features. By contrast,
only few KCNQ3 mutations have been rarely described, mostly in patients with typical BFNS. We
report clinical, genetic, and functional data from a family in which early-onset epilepsy and
neurocognitive deficits segregated with a novel mutations in KCNQ3 (c.989G>T; p.R330L).
Electrophysiological studies in mammalian cells revealed that incorporation of KCNQ3 R330L
mutant subunits impaired channel function, suggesting a pathogenetic role for such mutation. The
degree of functional impairment of channels incorporating KCNQ3 R330L subunits was larger than
that of channels carrying another KCNQ3 mutation affecting the same codon but leading to a
different amino acid substitution (p.R330C), previously identified in two families with typical
BFNS. These data suggest that mutations in KCNQ3, similarly to KCNQ2, can be found in patients
with more severe phenotypes including intellectual disability, and that the degree of the functional
impairment caused by mutations at position 330 in KCNQ3 may contribute to clinical disease
severity