1. Academic Validation
  2. Myasthenic syndrome caused by mutation of the SCN4A sodium channel

Myasthenic syndrome caused by mutation of the SCN4A sodium channel

  • Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2003 Jun 10;100(12):7377-82. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1230273100.
Akira Tsujino 1 Chantal Maertens Kinji Ohno Xin-Ming Shen Taku Fukuda C Michael Harper Stephen C Cannon Andrew G Engel
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Neurology and Neuromuscular Research Laboratory, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
Abstract

In a myasthenic syndrome associated with fatigable generalized weakness and recurrent attacks of respiratory and bulbar paralysis since birth, nerve stimulation at physiologic rates rapidly decremented the compound muscle action potential. Intercostal muscle studies revealed no abnormality of the resting membrane potential, evoked quantal release, synaptic potentials, acetylcholine receptor channel kinetics, or endplate ultrastructure, but endplate potentials depolarizing the resting potential to -40 mV failed to excite action potentials. Pursuing this clue, we sequenced SCN4A encoding the skeletal muscle Sodium Channel (Nav1.4) and detected two heteroallelic mutations involving conserved residues not present in 400 normal alleles: S246L in the S4/S5 cytoplasmic linker in domain I, and V1442E in the S3/S4 extracellular linker in domain IV. The genetically engineered V1442E-Na channel expressed in HEK cells shows marked enhancement of fast inactivation close to the resting potential, and enhanced use-dependent inactivation on high-frequency stimulation; S246L is likely a benign polymorphism. The V1442E mutation in SCN4A defines a novel disease mechanism and a novel phenotype with myasthenic features.

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