Gene identified for sudden unexpected death in epilepsy
Animal study suggests a mutated protein in brain cells can lead to cardiac arrest in people with epilepsy
Researchers have long suspected that abnormal ion channels in the brains of individuals that cause epilepsy also put them at risk for sudden unexplained death in epilepsy, or SUDEP, perhaps by harming the heart. An ion channel is a protein that lets charged particles enter or leave a cell to generate electrical signals, a basic process of nerve cell communication.
A team of neuroscientists, led by Jeffrey Noebels, MD, PhD, of the Department of Neurology, Baylor College of Medicine, used an animal model to study a particular type of potassium ion channel called Kv1.1, which helps regulate electrical signals in the brain. In humans, mutation of the gene for Kv1.1 has been associated with spontaneous seizures, abnormal muscle movements, and motor coordination problems. Now Noebels and his colleagues have found that these channels are also required for proper heart function.
In this study, they focused on Kv1.1 because studies have shown that mice without these channels show signs of severe epilepsy and involuntary movement, and they die prematurely. Noebels and his team investigated why the mice die and whether Kv1.1, in particular, is a possible factor for SUDEP.
The authors recorded electrical signals from the brains and hearts of mice bred to lack the gene for Kv1.1 channels to determine where and how the lethal abnormalities originated. The results showed that the hearts of the mutated mice skipped beats intermittently. When the mice had epileptic seizures, their heart beats became even more erratic — suggesting the signals from their brains to their hearts were disordered. The mice soon died after several episodes of cardiac arrest.
The researchers determined that in healthy animals these specific potassium channels are present in the brain and the vagus nerve, a bundle of axons that helps regulate cardiac rhythms, but are barely detectable in the heart. In the mutant mice, the brain signals sent to the heart through the vagus nerve were crippled.
"In mice without Kv1.1 channels, we think the vagus nerve loses control and sends extra nerve impulses to the heart, telling it to slow down — and even stop beating — when it shouldn't," said Edward Glasscock, PhD, first author of the study.
This potassium ion channel gene is the second such gene found by the group to cause abnormal electrical activity leading to death in epilepsy. "Now that we are starting to grasp the genes and proteins underlying SUDEP, we can begin to predict and find ways to reduce the risk of death in patients with epilepsy," Noebels said.
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