AI Article Synopsis

  • A de novo microdeletion involving the STXBP1 gene was found in one individual with early-onset West syndrome, severe hypomyelination, and developmental delays, although mutations in STXBP1 were not present in others from the same group.
  • Despite mutations in the STXBP1 gene being linked to a different cohort of infantile epileptic encephalopathy, researchers focused on SPTAN1, which was also deleted and is crucial for myelination, highlighting that mutations in SPTAN1 could contribute to the condition.
  • Abnormal behaviors of spectrin heterodimers due to these mutations were linked to disrupted clustering of important proteins, indicating a role for SPTAN1 in the pathogenesis of infantile

Article Abstract

A de novo 9q33.3-q34.11 microdeletion involving STXBP1 has been found in one of four individuals (group A) with early-onset West syndrome, severe hypomyelination, poor visual attention, and developmental delay. Although haploinsufficiency of STXBP1 was involved in early infantile epileptic encephalopathy in a previous different cohort study (group B), no mutations of STXBP1 were found in two of the remaining three subjects of group A (one was unavailable). We assumed that another gene within the deletion might contribute to the phenotype of group A. SPTAN1 encoding alpha-II spectrin, which is essential for proper myelination in zebrafish, turned out to be deleted. In two subjects, an in-frame 3 bp deletion and a 6 bp duplication in SPTAN1 were found at the initial nucleation site of the alpha/beta spectrin heterodimer. SPTAN1 was further screened in six unrelated individuals with WS and hypomyelination, but no mutations were found. Recombinant mutant (mut) and wild-type (WT) alpha-II spectrin could assemble heterodimers with beta-II spectrin, but alpha-II (mut)/beta-II spectrin heterodimers were thermolabile compared with the alpha-II (WT)/beta-II heterodimers. Transient expression in mouse cortical neurons revealed aggregation of alpha-II (mut)/beta-II and alpha-II (mut)/beta-III spectrin heterodimers, which was also observed in lymphoblastoid cells from two subjects with in-frame mutations. Clustering of ankyrinG and voltage-gated sodium channels at axon initial segment (AIS) was disturbed in relation to the aggregates, together with an elevated action potential threshold. These findings suggest that pathological aggregation of alpha/beta spectrin heterodimers and abnormal AIS integrity resulting from SPTAN1 mutations were involved in pathogenesis of infantile epilepsy.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3032058PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2010.04.013DOI Listing

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