Gene variant effects across sodium channelopathies predict function and guide precision therapy

Brunklaus, A. et al. (2022) Gene variant effects across sodium channelopathies predict function and guide precision therapy. Brain, 145(12), pp. 4275-4286. (doi: 10.1093/brain/awac006) (PMID:35037686)

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Abstract

Pathogenic variants in the voltage-gated sodium channel gene family (SCNs) lead to early onset epilepsies, neurodevelopmental disorders, skeletal muscle channelopathies, peripheral neuropathies and cardiac arrhythmias. Disease-associated variants have diverse functional effects ranging from complete loss-of-function to marked gain-of-function. Therapeutic strategy is likely to depend on functional effect. Experimental studies offer important insights into channel function, but are resource intensive and only performed in a minority of cases. Given the evolutionarily conserved nature of the sodium channel genes we investigated whether similarities in biophysical properties between different voltage-gated sodium channels can predict function and inform precision treatment across sodium channelopathies. We performed a systematic literature search identifying functionally assessed variants in any of the nine voltage-gated sodium channel genes until 28 April 2021. We included missense variants that had been electrophysiologically characterised in mammalian cells in whole-cell patch-clamp recordings. We performed an alignment of linear protein sequences of all sodium channel genes and correlated variants by their overall functional effect on biophysical properties. Of 951 identified records, 437 sodium channel-variants met our inclusion criteria and were reviewed for functional properties. Of these, 141 variants were epilepsy-associated (SCN1/2/3/8A), 79 had a neuromuscular phenotype (SCN4/9/10/11A), 149 were associated with a cardiac phenotype (SCN5/10A) and 68 (16%) were considered benign. We detected 38 missense variant pairs with an identical disease-associated variant in a different sodium channel gene. 35 out of 38 of those pairs resulted in similar functional consequences indicating up to 92% biophysical agreement between corresponding sodium channel variants (odds ratio = 11.3; 95% CI = 2.8 to 66.9; P < 0.001). Pathogenic missense variants were clustered in specific functional domains, whereas population variants were significantly more frequent across non conserved domains (odds ratio = 18.6; 95% CI = 10.9 to 34.4; P < 0.001). Pore-loop regions were frequently associated with loss-of-function (LoF) variants, whereas inactivation sites were associated with gain-of-function (GoF; odds ratio = 42.1, 95% CI = 14.5 to 122.4; P < 0.001), whilst variants occurring in voltage-sensing regions comprised a range of gain- and loss-of-function effects. Our findings suggest that biophysical characterisation of variants in one SCN-gene can predict channel function across different SCN-genes where experimental data are not available. The collected data represent the first GoF versus LoF topological map of SCN proteins indicating shared patterns of biophysical effects aiding variant analysis and guiding precision therapy. We integrated our findings into a free online webtool to facilitate functional sodium channel gene variant interpretation (http://SCN-viewer.broadinstitute.org).

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Zuberi, Dr Sameer and Symonds, Dr Joseph and Brunklaus, Professor Andreas
Authors: Brunklaus, A., Feng, T., Brünger, T., Perez-Palma, E., Heyne, H., Matthews, E., Semsarian, C., Symonds, J. D., Zuberi, S. M., Lal, D., and Schorge, S.
College/School:College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Medicine, Dentistry & Nursing
Journal Name:Brain
Publisher:Oxford University Press
ISSN:0006-8950
ISSN (Online):1460-2156
Published Online:17 January 2022
Copyright Holders:Copyright © 2022 The Authors
First Published:First published in Brain 145(12): 4275-4286
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons License

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