Mathematical Biology Seminar
Karen Wilcox
Neuroscience, University of Utah
Wednesday April 28, 2010
The M -Channel and Epilepsy: Mutations, Mice and Medicine
Abstract:
The M-type K+ current [IK(M)] activates in response to membrane
depolarization and regulates neuronal excitability. Mutations in two
subunits (KCNQ2 and KCNQ3; Kv7.2 and Kv7.3) that underlie the
M-channel cause the human seizure disorder Benign Familial Neonatal
Convulsions (BFNC), presumably by reducing IK(M) function. While
numerous studies have provided evidence for the inhibitory role of
normally functioning M-channels in key brain structures related to
seizures and epileptogenesis, the BFNC sequelae from mutation to
seizure and ultimately to remission is likely very complex. In an
effort to determine the role of the KCNQ mutations in epilepsy, our
lab has investigated M-channel function in a number of mouse models
with either spontaneous or targeted deletions in the Kcnq2 or Kcnq3
genes. The approach of combining whole-animal behavior, pharmacology
and single-cell biophysics in mouse models of BFNC has helped solidify
the link between attenuated IK(M) function, increased seizure
susceptibility that result from Kcnq2 and Kcnq3 mutations, and the
role of the M-channel as a target for novel anticonvulsants.
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