Stretch-activated ion channel TMEM63B associates with developmental and epileptic encephalopathies and progressive neurodegeneration

Publication date

2023-08-03

Authors

Vetro, Annalisa
Pelorosso, Cristiana
Balestrini, Simona
Masi, Alessio
Hambleton, Sophie
Argilli, Emanuela
Conti, Valerio
Giubbolini, Simone
Barrick, Rebekah
Bergant, Gaber

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Article

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Abstract

By converting physical forces into electrical signals or triggering intracellular cascades, stretch-activated ion channels allow the cell to respond to osmotic and mechanical stress. Knowledge of the pathophysiological mechanisms underlying associations of stretch-activated ion channels with human disease is limited. Here, we describe 17 unrelated individuals with severe early-onset developmental and epileptic encephalopathy (DEE), intellectual disability, and severe motor and cortical visual impairment associated with progressive neurodegenerative brain changes carrying ten distinct heterozygous variants of TMEM63B, encoding for a highly conserved stretch-activated ion channel. The variants occurred de novo in 16/17 individuals for whom parental DNA was available and either missense, including the recurrent p.Val44Met in 7/17 individuals, or in-frame, all affecting conserved residues located in transmembrane regions of the protein. In 12 individuals, hematological abnormalities co-occurred, such as macrocytosis and hemolysis, requiring blood transfusions in some. We modeled six variants (p.Val44Met, p.Arg433His, p.Thr481Asn, p.Gly580Ser, p.Arg660Thr, and p.Phe697Leu), each affecting a distinct transmembrane domain of the channel, in transfected Neuro2a cells and demonstrated inward leak cation currents across the mutated channel even in isotonic conditions, while the response to hypo-osmotic challenge was impaired, as were the Ca2+ transients generated under hypo-osmotic stimulation. Ectopic expression of the p.Val44Met and p.Gly580Cys variants in Drosophila resulted in early death. TMEM63B-associated DEE represents a recognizable clinicopathological entity in which altered cation conductivity results in a severe neurological phenotype with progressive brain damage and early-onset epilepsy associated with hematological abnormalities in most individuals.

Keywords

abnormal myelination, epilepsy, epileptic encephalopathy, hemolytic anemia, infantile spasms, ion channels, leak cation currents, osmotic stress, white matter abnormality, Genetics, Genetics(clinical)

Citation

Vetro, A, Pelorosso, C, Balestrini, S, Masi, A, Hambleton, S, Argilli, E, Conti, V, Giubbolini, S, Barrick, R, Bergant, G, Writzl, K, Bijlsma, E K, Brunet, T, Cacheiro, P, Mei, D, Devlin, A, Hoffer, M J V, Machol, K, Mannaioni, G, Sakamoto, M, Menezes, M P, Courtin, T, Sherr, E, Parra, R, Richardson, R, Roscioli, T, Scala, M, von Stülpnagel, C, Smedley, D, Pochiero, F, Mari, F, Ramesh, V, Capra, V, Mancardi, M, Keren, B, Mignot, C, Lulli, M, Parks, K, Griffin, H, Brugger, M, Nigro, V, Hirata, Y, Koichihara, R, Peterlin, B, Maki, R, Nitta, Y, Ambrose, J C, Arumugam, P, van der Smagt, J J, van Gassen, K, Telethon Undiagnosed Diseases Program (TUDP) consortium & TMEM63B collaborators, The Genomics England Research Consortium 2023, 'Stretch-activated ion channel TMEM63B associates with developmental and epileptic encephalopathies and progressive neurodegeneration', American Journal of Human Genetics, vol. 110, no. 8, pp. 1356-1376. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2023.06.008