4.8 Article

Sodium Channel SCN3A (NaV1.3) Regulation of Human Cerebral Cortical Folding and Oral Motor Development

Journal

NEURON
Volume 99, Issue 5, Pages 905-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2018.07.052

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Funding

  1. NIH [1F32NS100033801, R01NS032457, R01NS035129]
  2. Erasmus MC Mrace project [104673]
  3. Finnish Medical Society
  4. Arvo and Lea Ylppo Foundation
  5. Finnish governmental subsidiaries [TLK0278, TRTR019]
  6. Folkhalsan Research Foundation
  7. Paul G. Allen Frontiers Program
  8. New York Stem Cell Foundation
  9. BCH IDDRC [1U54HD090255]

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Channelopathies are disorders caused by abnormal ion channel function in differentiated excitable tissues. We discovered a unique neurodevelopmental channelopathy resulting from pathogenic variants in SCN3A, a gene encoding the voltage-gated sodium channel Na(V)1.3. Pathogenic Na(V)1.3 channels showed altered biophysical properties including increased persistent current. Remarkably, affected individuals showed disrupted folding (polymicrogyria) of the perisylvian cortex of the brain but did not typically exhibit epilepsy; they presented with prominent speech and oral motor dysfunction, implicating SCN3A in prenatal development of human cortical language areas. The development of this disorder parallels SCN3A expression, which we observed to be highest early in fetal cortical development in progenitor cells of the outer subventricular zone and cortical plate neurons and decreased postnatally, when SCN1A (Na(V)1.1) expression increased. Disrupted cerebral cortical folding and neuronal migration were recapitulated in ferrets expressing the mutant channel, underscoring the unexpected role of SCN3A in progenitor cells and migrating neurons.

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