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Mono and biallelic variants in HCN2 cause severe neurodevelopmental disorders.

Authors :
Houdayer C
Phillips AM
Chabbert M
Bourreau J
Maroofian R
Houlden H
Richards K
Saadi NW
Dad'ová E
Van Bogaert P
Rupin M
Keren B
Charles P
Smol T
Riquet A
Pais L
O'Donnell-Luria A
VanNoy GE
Bayat A
Møller RS
Olofsson K
Abou Jamra R
Syrbe S
Dasouki M
Seaver LH
Sullivan JA
Shashi V
Alkuraya FS
Poss AF
Spence JE
Schnur RE
Forster IC
Mckenzie CE
Simons C
Wang M
Snell P
Kothur K
Buckley M
Roscioli T
Elserafy N
Dauriat B
Procaccio V
Henrion D
Lenaers G
Colin E
Verbeek NE
Van Gassen KL
Legendre C
Bonneau D
Reid CA
Howell KB
Ziegler A
Legros C
Source :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences [medRxiv] 2024 Mar 22. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Mar 22.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Hyperpolarization activated Cyclic Nucleotide (HCN) gated channels are crucial for various neurophysiological functions, including learning and sensory functions, and their dysfunction are responsible for brain disorders, such as epilepsy. To date, HCN2 variants have only been associated with mild epilepsy and recently, one monoallelic missense variant has been linked to developmental and epileptic encephalopathy. Here, we expand the phenotypic spectrum of HCN2- related disorders by describing twenty-one additional individuals from fifteen unrelated families carrying HCN2 variants. Seventeen individuals had developmental delay/intellectual disability (DD/ID), two had borderline DD/ID, and one had borderline DD. Ten individuals had epilepsy with DD/ID, with median age of onset of 10 months, and one had epilepsy with normal development. Molecular diagnosis identified thirteen different pathogenic HCN2 variants, including eleven missense variants affecting highly conserved amino acids, one frameshift variant, and one in-frame deletion. Seven variants were monoallelic of which five occurred de novo, one was not maternally inherited, one was inherited from a father with mild learning disabilities, and one was of unknown inheritance. The remaining six variants were biallelic, with four homozygous and two compound heterozygous variants. Functional studies using two-electrode voltage-clamp recordings in Xenopus laevis oocytes were performed on three monoallelic variants, p.(Arg324His), p.(Ala363Val), and p.(Met374Leu), and three biallelic variants, p.(Leu377His), p.(Pro493Leu) and p.(Gly587Asp). The p.(Arg324His) variant induced a strong increase of HCN2 conductance, while p.(Ala363Val) and p.(Met374Leu) displayed dominant negative effects, leading to a partial loss of HCN2 channel function. By confocal imaging, we found that the p.(Leu377His), p.(Pro493Leu) and p.(Gly587Asp) pathogenic variants impaired membrane trafficking, resulting in a complete loss of HCN2 elicited currents in Xenopus oocytes. Structural 3D-analysis in depolarized and hyperpolarized states of HCN2 channels, revealed that the pathogenic variants p.(His205Gln), p.(Ser409Leu), p.(Arg324Cys), p.(Asn369Ser) and p.(Gly460Asp) modify molecular interactions altering HCN2 function. Taken together, our data broadens the clinical spectrum associated with HCN2 variants, and disclose that HCN2 is involved in developmental encephalopathy with or without epilepsy.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
MedRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
Accession number :
38562733
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.03.19.24303984