Author:
Stein Rachael E.,Kaplan Joshua S.,Li Jin,Catterall William A.
Abstract
Dravet Syndrome is a severe childhood epileptic disorder caused by haploinsufficiency of theSCN1Agene encoding brain voltage-gated sodium channel NaV1.1. Symptoms include treatment-refractory epilepsy, cognitive impairment, autistic-like behavior, and premature death. The specific loci of NaV1.1 function in the brain that underlie these global deficits remain unknown. Here we specifically deletedScn1ain the hippocampus using the Cre-Lox method in weanling mice. Local gene deletion caused selective reduction of inhibitory neurotransmission measured in dentate granule cells. Mice with local NaV1.1 reduction had thermally evoked seizures and spatial learning deficits, but they did not have abnormalities of locomotor activity or social interaction. Our results show that local gene deletion in the hippocampus can induce two of the most severe dysfunctions of Dravet Syndrome: Epilepsy and cognitive deficit. Considering these results, the hippocampus may be a potential target for future gene therapy for Dravet Syndrome.
Funder
HHS | National Institutes of Health
University of Washington
National Science Foundation
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Cited by
55 articles.
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