318 research outputs found
Driving with no brakes: Molecular pathophysiology of Kv7 potassium channels
Kv7 potassium channels regulate excitability in neuronal, sensory, and muscular cells. Here, we describe their molecular architecture, physiological roles, and involvement in genetically determined channelopathies highlighting their relevance as targets for pharmacological treatment of several human disorders
Gating currents from Kv7 channels carrying neuronal hyperexcitability mutations in the voltage-sensing domain
Changes in voltage-dependent gating represent a common pathogenetic mechanism for genetically inherited channelopathies, such as benign familial neonatal seizures or peripheral nerve hyperexcitability caused by mutations in neuronal K(v)7.2 channels. Mutation-induced changes in channel voltage dependence are most often inferred from macroscopic current measurements, a technique unable to provide a detailed assessment of the structural rearrangements underlying channel gating behavior; by contrast, gating currents directly measure voltage-sensor displacement during voltage-dependent gating. In this work, we describe macroscopic and gating current measurements, together with molecular modeling and molecular-dynamics simulations, from channels carrying mutations responsible for benign familial neonatal seizures and/or peripheral nerve hyperexcitability; K(v)7.4 channels, highly related to K(v)7.2 channels both functionally and structurally, were used for these experiments. The data obtained showed that mutations affecting charged residues located in the more distal portion of S(4) decrease the stability of the open state and the active voltage-sensing domain configuration but do not directly participate in voltage sensing, whereas mutations affecting a residue (R4) located more proximally in S(4) caused activation of gating-pore currents at depolarized potentials. These results reveal that distinct molecular mechanisms underlie the altered gating behavior of channels carrying disease-causing mutations at different voltage-sensing domain locations, thereby expanding our current view of the pathogenesis of neuronal hyperexcitability diseases
Protective role of Kv7 channels in oxygen and glucose deprivation-induced damage in rat caudate brain slices
Ischemic stroke can cause striatal dopamine efflux that contributes to cell death. Since Kv7 potassium channels regulate dopamine release, we investigated the effects of their pharmacological modulation on dopamine efflux, measured by fast cyclic voltammetry (FCV), and neurotoxicity, in Wistar rat caudate brain slices undergoing oxygen and glucose deprivation (OGD). The Kv7 activators retigabine and ICA27243 delayed the onset, and decreased the peak level of dopamine efflux induced by OGD; and also decreased OGD-induced damage measured by 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium chloride (TTC) staining. Retigabine also reduced OGD-induced necrotic cell death evaluated by lactate dehydrogenase activity assay. The Kv7 blocker linopirdine increased OGD-evoked dopamine efflux and OGD-induced damage, and attenuated the effects of retigabine. Quantitative-PCR experiments showed that OGD caused an ~ 6-fold decrease in Kv7.2 transcript, while levels of mRNAs encoding for other Kv7 subunits were unaffected; western blot experiments showed a parallel reduction in Kv7.2 protein levels. Retigabine also decreased the peak level of dopamine efflux induced by L-glutamate, and attenuated the loss of TTC staining induced by the excitotoxin. These results suggest a role for Kv7.2 in modulating ischemia-evoked caudate damage
Specification of skeletal muscle differentiation by repressor element-1 silencing transcription factor (REST)-regulated Kv7.4 potassium channels
Changes in the expression of potassium (K(+)) channels is a pivotal event during skeletal muscle differentiation. In mouse C(2)C(12) cells, similarly to human skeletal muscle cells, myotube formation increased the expression of K(v)7.1, K(v)7.3, and K(v)7.4, the last showing the highest degree of regulation. In C(2)C(12) cells, K(v)7.4 silencing by RNA interference reduced the expression levels of differentiation markers (myogenin, myosin heavy chain, troponinT-1, and Pax3) and impaired myotube formation and multinucleation. In K(v)7.4-silenced cells, the differentiation-promoting effect of the K(v)7 activator N-(2-amino-4-(4-fluorobenzylamino)-phenyl)-carbamic acid ethyl ester (retigabine) was abrogated. Expression levels for the repressor element-1 silencing transcription factor (REST) declined during myotube formation. Transcript levels for K(v)7.4, as well as for myogenin, troponinT-1, and Pax3, were reduced by REST overexpression and enhanced upon REST suppression by RNA interference. Four regions containing potential REST-binding sites in the 5′ untranslated region and in the first intron of the K(v)7.4 gene were identified by bioinformatic analysis. Chromatin immunoprecipitation assays showed that REST binds to these regions, exhibiting a higher efficiency in myoblasts than in myotubes. These data suggest that K(v)7.4 plays a permissive role in skeletal muscle differentiation and highlight REST as a crucial transcriptional regulator for this K(+) channel subunit
Correlating the Clinical and Genetic Features of Benign Familial Neonatal Seizures (BFNS) with the Functional Consequences of Underlying Mutations
Almost ten years have passed since the identification of Kv7.2 and Kv7.3, the genes altered in benign familial neonatal seizures (BFNS), a familial autosomal dominant focal epilepsy of the newborn. Despite the rarity of the disease, clinical and genetic data have been gathered from more than 50 BFNS-affected families; these studies reveal that each family harbours a specific disease-causing mutation, and that the mutation-induced functional changes range from a subtle alteration in channel behaviour to a complete ablation of channel function. Prompted by the recent identification of peculiar gating changes in Kv7.2 subunits caused by novel mutations responsible for BFNS, in the present work we attempt to link, whenever possible, the specific genetic defect with the clinical evolution of the disease in the affected families on one side, and, on the other, with the functional defects revealed by expression studies. Such genotype-phenotype correlations may provide clues on the pathogenesis of the wide variety of neuropsychiatric manifestations often associated to BFNS, and should foster our attempts to gain more detailed functional information which might help to elucidate the pathogenetic mechanisms of the disease
Gender-related issues in the pharmacology of new anti-obesity drugs
Four new medicines-liraglutide, lorcaserin, bupropion/naltrexone, and phentermine/topiramate-have been recently added to the pharmacological arsenal for obesity treatment and could represent important tools to manage this epidemic disease. To achieve satisfactory anti-obesity goals, the use of these new medicines should be optimized and tailored to specific patient subpopulations also by applying dose adjustments if needed. In the present review, we posit that gender could be among the factors influencing the activity of the new obesity drugs both because of pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic factors. Although evidence from premarketing clinical studies suggested that no dose adjustment by gender is necessary for any of these new medicines, these studies were not specifically designed to identify gender-related differences. This observation, together with the strong theoretical background supporting the hypothesis of a gender-dimorphic response, strongly call upon an urgent need of new real-life data on gender-related difference in the pharmacology of these new obesity drugs
Genotype-phenotype correlations in neonatal epilepsies caused by mutations in the voltage sensor of Kv7.2 potassium channel subunits
Mutations in the K(V)7.2 gene encoding for voltage-dependent K(+) channel subunits cause neonatal epilepsies with wide phenotypic heterogeneity. Two mutations affecting the same positively charged residue in the S(4) domain of K(V)7.2 have been found in children affected with benign familial neonatal seizures (R213W mutation) or with neonatal epileptic encephalopathy with severe pharmacoresistant seizures and neurocognitive delay, suppression-burst pattern at EEG, and distinct neuroradiological features (R213Q mutation). To examine the molecular basis for this strikingly different phenotype, we studied the functional characteristics of mutant channels by using electrophysiological techniques, computational modeling, and homology modeling. Functional studies revealed that, in homomeric or heteromeric configuration with K(V)7.2 and/or K(V)7.3 subunits, both mutations markedly destabilized the open state, causing a dramatic decrease in channel voltage sensitivity. These functional changes were (i) more pronounced for channels incorporating R213Q- than R213W-carrying K(V)7.2 subunits; (ii) proportional to the number of mutant subunits incorporated; and (iii) fully restored by the neuronal K(v)7 activator retigabine. Homology modeling confirmed a critical role for the R213 residue in stabilizing the activated voltage sensor configuration. Modeling experiments in CA1 hippocampal pyramidal cells revealed that both mutations increased cell firing frequency, with the R213Q mutation prompting more dramatic functional changes compared with the R213W mutation. These results suggest that the clinical disease severity may be related to the extent of the mutation-induced functional K(+) channel impairment, and set the preclinical basis for the potential use of K(v)7 openers as a targeted anticonvulsant therapy to improve developmental outcome in neonates with K(V)7.2 encephalopathy
Epilepsy phenotype and response to KCNQ openers in mice harboring the Kcnq2 R207W voltage-sensor mutation
KCNQ2-encoded Kv7.2 subunits play a critical role in balancing neuronal excitability. Mutations in KCNQ2 are responsible for highly-heterogenous epileptic and neurodevelopmental phenotypes ranging from self-limited familial neonatal epilepsy (SeLFNE) to severe developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE). Pathogenic KCNQ2 variants cluster at the voltage sensor domain (VSD), the pore domain, and the C-terminal tail. Although several knock-in mice harboring Kcnq2 pore variants have been developed, no mouse line carrying Kcnq2 voltage-sensor mutations has been described. KCNQ2-R207W is an epilepsy-causing mutation located in the VSD, mainly affecting voltage-dependent channel gating. To study the physiological consequence of Kcnq2 VSD dysfunction, we generated a Kcnq2-R207W mouse line and analyzed the pathological and pharmacological phenotypes of mutant mice. As a result, both homozygous (Kcnq2RW/RW) and heterozygous (Kcnq2RW/+) mice were viable. While Kcnq2RW/RW mice displayed a short lifespan, growth retardation, and spontaneous seizures, Kcnq2RW/+ mice survived and developed normally, although only a fraction (9/64; 14%) of them showed behavioral- and ECoG-confirmed spontaneous seizures. Kcnq2RW/+ mice displayed increased susceptibility to evoked seizures, which was dramatically ameliorated by treatment with the novel KCNQ opener pynegabine (HN37). Our results show that the Kcnq2-R207W mouse line, the first harboring a Kcnq2 voltage-sensor mutation, exhibits a unique epileptic phenotype with both spontaneous seizures and increased susceptibility to evoked seizures. In Kcnq2-R207W mice, the potent KCNQ opener HN37, currently in clinical phase I, shows strong anticonvulsant activity, suggesting it may represent a valuable option for the severe phenotypes of KCNQ2-related epilepsy
Neuronal potassium channel openers in the management of epilepsy: role and potential of retigabine
Despite the availability of over 20 antiepileptic drugs, about 30% of epileptic patients do not achieve seizure control. Thus, identification of additional molecules targeting novel molecular mechanisms is a primary effort in today’s antiepileptic drug research. This paper reviews the pharmacological development of retigabine, an antiepileptic drug with a novel mechanism of action, namely the activation of voltage-gated potassium channels of the Kv7 subfamily. These channels, which act as widespread regulators of intrinsic neuronal excitability and of neurotransmitter-induced network excitability changes, are currently viewed among the most promising targets for anticonvulsant pharmacotherapy. In particular, the present work reviews the pathophysiological role of Kv7 channels in neuronal function, the molecular mechanisms involved in the Kv7 channel-opening action of retigabine, the activity of retigabine in preclinical in vitro and in vivo studies predictive of anticonvulsant activities, and the clinical status of development for this drug as an add-on treatment for pharmacoresistant epilepsy. Particular efforts are devoted to highlighting the potential advantages and disadvantages of retigabine when compared with currently available compounds, in order to provide a comprehensive assessment of its role in therapy for treatment-resistant epilepsies
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