Ryan S G
Division of Child Neurology, the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, and the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, USA.
J Child Neurol. 1999 Jan;14(1):58-66. doi: 10.1177/088307389901400104.
Recent application of genetic analysis to rare, hereditary epilepsies has resulted in the identification of mutations in genes encoding ion channels or functionally related proteins in several human and animal syndromes. Reviewed here are selected human and murine epilepsies that result from ion channel mutations. In humans, three autosomal-dominant disorders--benign familial neonatal convulsions, nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy, and "generalized epilepsy with febrile seizures plus"--result from mutations affecting voltage-sensitive potassium channels, a central nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, and a voltage-sensitive sodium channel, respectively. In mice, four genetically distinct, autosomal-recessive models of absence epilepsy are caused by mutations in genes encoding three types of calcium channel subunits and a sodium-hydrogen ion exchanger. These findings suggest that variation in genes encoding ion channels could determine susceptibility to common human epilepsies.
最近,基因分析在罕见遗传性癫痫中的应用,已导致在几种人类和动物综合征中,鉴定出编码离子通道或功能相关蛋白的基因突变。本文综述了由离子通道突变引起的部分人类和小鼠癫痫。在人类中,三种常染色体显性疾病——良性家族性新生儿惊厥、夜间额叶癫痫和“伴有热性惊厥附加症的全身性癫痫”——分别由影响电压敏感性钾通道、一种中枢烟碱型乙酰胆碱受体和一种电压敏感性钠通道的突变引起。在小鼠中,四种基因不同的常染色体隐性失神癫痫模型,是由编码三种类型钙通道亚基和一种钠氢离子交换体的基因突变所致。这些发现表明,编码离子通道的基因变异可能决定对常见人类癫痫的易感性。