نتایج جستجو برای: scn1a mutations

تعداد نتایج: 173129  

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2004
Thomas H Rhodes Christoph Lossin Carlos G Vanoye Dao W Wang Alfred L George

Mutations in SCN1A, the gene encoding the brain voltage-gated sodium channel alpha(1) subunit (Na(V)1.1), are associated with at least two forms of epilepsy, generalized epilepsy with febrile seizures plus and severe myoclonic epilepsy of infancy (SMEI). We examined the functional properties of five SMEI mutations by using whole-cell patch-clamp analysis of heterologously expressed recombinant ...

2016
Rajech Sharkia Holger Hengel Ludger Schöls Muhammad Athamna Peter Bauer Muhammad Mahajnah

BACKGROUND Dravet syndrome, a rare genetic disorder with early-onset epileptic encephalopathy, was first described by Dravet in 1978. Dravet syndrome is most frequently caused by various mutations of the SCN1A gene encoding the type 1 subunit of the neuronal voltage-gated sodium channel. CASE PRESENTATION Two sisters of a non-consanguineous Palestinian family from the Arab community in Israel...

2016
Jennifer C. Wong Stacey B. B. Dutton Stephen D. Collins Steven Schachter Andrew Escayg

De novo loss-of-function mutations in the voltage-gated sodium channel (VGSC) SCN1A (encoding Nav1.1) are the main cause of Dravet syndrome (DS), a catastrophic early-life encephalopathy associated with prolonged and recurrent early-life febrile seizures (FSs), refractory afebrile epilepsy, cognitive and behavioral deficits, and a 15-20% mortality rate. SCN1A mutations also lead to genetic epil...

Journal: :Neurobiology of disease 2013
Iori Ohmori Mamoru Ouchida Katsuhiro Kobayashi Yoshimi Jitsumori Akiko Mori Hiroyuki Michiue Teiichi Nishiki Yoko Ohtsuka Hideki Matsui

Dravet syndrome is an intractable epileptic syndrome beginning in the first year of life. De novo mutations of SCN1A, which encode the Na(v)1.1 neuronal voltage-gated sodium channel, are considered the major cause of Dravet syndrome. In this study, we investigated genetic modifiers of this syndrome. We performed a mutational analysis of all coding exons of CACNA1A in 48 subjects with Dravet syn...

Journal: :Epileptic disorders : international epilepsy journal with videotape 2010
Dimitar N Azmanov Sashka Zhelyazkova Petya S Dimova Melania Radionova Veneta Bojinova Laura Florez Shelagh J Smith Ivailo Tournev Assen Jablensky John Mulley Ingrid Scheffer Luba Kalaydjieva Josemir W Sander

SCN1A mutations account for a large proportion of Dravet syndrome patients, and are reported in other cases of epilepsy, such as some families with genetic epilepsy with febrile seizures plus (GEFS+). While most Dravet syndrome cases are caused by de novo mutations, 5% inherit a mutation from a mildly affected or symptom-free parent. Parental mosaicism has been identified, with documented cases...

2016
Nicole A. Hawkins Nicole J. Zachwieja Alison R. Miller Lyndsey L. Anderson Jennifer A. Kearney

A substantial number of mutations have been identified in voltage-gated sodium channel genes that result in various forms of human epilepsy. SCN1A mutations result in a spectrum of severity ranging from mild febrile seizures to Dravet syndrome, an infant-onset epileptic encephalopathy. Dravet syndrome patients experience multiple seizures types that are often refractory to treatment, developmen...

Journal: :Neuron 2002
Christoph Lossin Dao W. Wang Thomas H. Rhodes Carlos G. Vanoye Alfred L. George

Epilepsy is a common neurological condition that reflects neuronal hyperexcitability arising from largely unknown cellular and molecular mechanisms. In generalized epilepsy with febrile seizures plus, an autosomal dominant epilepsy syndrome, mutations in three genes coding for voltage-gated sodium channel alpha or beta1 subunits (SCN1A, SCN2A, SCN1B) and one GABA receptor subunit gene (GABRG2) ...

Journal: :The Journal of General Physiology 2006
Carlos G. Vanoye Christoph Lossin Thomas H. Rhodes Alfred L. George

Mutations in genes encoding neuronal voltage-gated sodium channel subunits have been linked to inherited forms of epilepsy. The majority of mutations (>100) associated with generalized epilepsy with febrile seizures plus (GEFS+) and severe myoclonic epilepsy of infancy (SMEI) occur in SCN1A encoding the NaV1.1 neuronal sodium channel alpha-subunit. Previous studies demonstrated functional heter...

Journal: :Orvosi hetilap 2015
Judit Bene Kinga Hadzsiev Katalin Komlósi Erzsébet Kövesdi Petra Mátyás Béla Melegh

Severe myoclonic epilepsy in infancy (Dravet's syndrome) is a very rare form of epilepsy. Mutations of SCN1A gene encoding voltage-gated sodium channel alpha-1 subunit are major causes of the autosomal dominant disorder. Most cases are associated with a de novo point mutation, but some patients have copy number variations. The protein encoded by the SCN1A gene plays a role in the generation and...

Journal: :Neurobiology of disease 2008
Iori Ohmori Mamoru Ouchida Takafumi Miki Nobuyoshi Mimaki Shigeki Kiyonaka Teiichi Nishiki Kazuhito Tomizawa Yasuo Mori Hideki Matsui

Mutations of SCN1A, encoding the voltage-gated sodium channel alpha1 subunit, represent the most frequent genetic cause of severe myoclonic epilepsy in infancy (SMEI). The purpose of this study was to determine if mutations in other seizure susceptibility genes are also present and could modify the disease severity. All coding exons of SCN1B, GABRG2, and CACNB4 genes were screened for mutations...

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