Ion Channel Functional Candidate Genes in Multigenic Neuropsychiatric Disease
Received 10 May 2005; received in revised form 15 November 2005; accepted 15 December 2005. published online 22 February 2006.
Scores of monogenic Mendelian ion channel diseases serve to anchor the pathophysiology of the channelopathies, but there are also now clear examples of environmental, pharmacogenetic, and acquired channelopathy mechanisms. The cardinal feature of heritable ion channel disease is a periodic disturbance of rhythmic function in constitutionally hyperexcitable tissue. While the complexity of neuroanatomy obscures functional analysis of mutations causing monogenic seizure, ataxia, or migraine syndromes, extrapolation from the cardiac (Long QT [LQT]) and muscle (Periodic Paralysis) channelopathy syndromes provides a simplified predictive framework of molecular pathology: electrically stabilizing potassium ion (K+) and chloride ion (Cl−) channels, likely having lesions that diminish their current, and excitatory Na+ channels, likely having gain-of-function lesions. The voltage-gated calcium channel gene family that contains CACNA1C, the newest LQT locus, causing Timothy Syndrome with a phenotype including autism, has proven to be particularly informative for its members’ ability to tie the various central nervous system (CNS) phenotypes together in an interpretable fashion, now including direct extension to the classically multigenic neuropsychiatric phenotypes. Features of a promising ion channel candidate gene arise from its broad locus, gene family, nature of alleles, physiology and pharmacology, tissue expression profile, and phenotype in model organisms. KCNN3 is explored as a paradigm to consider.
Departments of Physiology and Biophysics and Pediatrics, Section of Human Genetics, University of California, Irvine, California.
Address reprint requests to J. Jay Gargus, M.D., Ph.D., University of California, Irvine, Departments of Physiology and Biophysics and Pediatrics, Section of Human Genetics, 328 Sprague Building, 839 Medical Sciences Court, Mail Code: 4034, Irvine, CA 92697-4034