4.8 Article

Drug screening in Scn1a zebrafish mutant identifies clemizole as a potential Dravet syndrome treatment

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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
卷 4, 期 -, 页码 -

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NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ncomms3410

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资金

  1. Sandler Asthma Basic Research (SABRE) Center Functional Genomics Core Facility
  2. NIH/NCRR UCSF-CTSI Grant [UL1 RR024131]
  3. EUREKA grant from the NINDS [1 R01 NS079214]
  4. Dravet Syndrome Foundation
  5. Challenge Award from Citizens United for Research in Epilepsy

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Dravet syndrome is a catastrophic pediatric epilepsy with severe intellectual disability, impaired social development and persistent drug-resistant seizures. One of its primary monogenic causes are mutations in Na(v)1.1 (SCN1A), a voltage-gated sodium channel. Here we characterize zebrafish Na(v)1.1 (scn1Lab) mutants originally identified in a chemical mutagenesis screen. Mutants exhibit spontaneous abnormal electrographic activity, hyperactivity and convulsive behaviours. Although scn1Lab expression is reduced, microarray analysis is remarkable for the small fraction of differentially expressed genes (similar to 3%) and lack of compensatory expression changes in other scn subunits. Ketogenic diet, diazepam, valproate, potassium bromide and stiripentol attenuate mutant seizure activity; seven other antiepileptic drugs have no effect. A phenotype-based screen of 320 compounds identifies a US Food and Drug Administration-approved compound (clemizole) that inhibits convulsive behaviours and electrographic seizures. This approach represents a new direction in modelling pediatric epilepsy and could be used to identify novel therapeutics for any monogenic epilepsy disorder.

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