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XB-ART-52363
Ann Neurol 2016 Oct 01;804:. doi: 10.1002/ana.24762.
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A recurrent mutation in KCNA2 as a novel cause of hereditary spastic paraplegia and ataxia.

Helbig KL , Hedrich UB , Shinde DN , Krey I , Teichmann AC , Hentschel J , Schubert J , Chamberlin AC , Huether R , Lu HM , Alcaraz WA , Tang S , Jungbluth C , Dugan SL , Vainionpää L , Karle KN , Synofzik M , Schöls L , Schüle R , Lehesjoki AE , Helbig I , Lerche H , Lemke JR .


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The hereditary spastic paraplegias (HSPs) are heterogeneous neurodegenerative disorders with over 50 known causative genes. We identified a recurrent mutation in KCNA2 (c.881G>A, p.R294H), encoding the voltage-gated K(+) -channel, KV 1.2, in two unrelated families with HSP, intellectual disability (ID), and ataxia. Follow-up analysis of > 2,000 patients with various neurological phenotypes identified a de novo p.R294H mutation in a proband with ataxia and ID. Two-electrode voltage-clamp recordings of Xenopus laevis oocytes expressing mutant KV 1.2 channels showed loss of function with a dominant-negative effect. Our findings highlight the phenotypic spectrum of a recurrent KCNA2 mutation, implicating ion channel dysfunction as a novel HSP disease mechanism. Ann Neurol 2016.

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Species referenced: Xenopus laevis
Genes referenced: kcna2


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References [+] :
Aggarwal, Contribution of the S4 segment to gating charge in the Shaker K+ channel. 1996, Pubmed, Xenbase