Epilepsy-causing KCNT1 variants increase KNa1.1 channel activity by disrupting the activation gate

Author:

Cole Bethan A.ORCID,Pilati NadiaORCID,Lippiat Jonathan D.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractGain-of-function pathogenic missense KCNT1 variants are associated with several developmental and epileptic encephalopathies (DEE). With few exceptions, patients are heterozygous and there is a paucity of mechanistic information about how pathogenic variants increase KNa1.1 channel activity and the behaviour of heterotetrameric channels comprising both wild-type (WT) and variant subunits. To better understand these, we selected a range of variants across the DEE spectrum, involving mutations in different protein domains and studied their functional properties. Whole-cell electrophysiology was used to characterise homomeric and heteromeric KNa1.1 channel assemblies carrying DEE-causing variants in the presence and absence of 10 mM intracellular sodium. Voltage-dependent activation of homomeric variant KNa1.1 assemblies were more hyperpolarised than WT KNa1.1 and, unlike WT KNa1.1, exhibited voltage-dependent activation in the absence of intracellular sodium. Heteromeric channels formed by co-expression of WT and variant KNa1.1 had activation kinetics intermediate of homomeric WT and variant KNa1.1 channels, with residual sodium-independent activity. In general, WT and variant KNa1.1 activation followed a single exponential, with time constants unaffected by voltage or sodium. Mutating the threonine in the KNa1.1 selectivity filter disrupted voltage-dependent activation, but sodium-dependence remained intact. Our findings suggest that KNa1.1 gating involves a sodium-dependent activation gate that modulates a voltage-dependent selectivity filter gate. Collectively, all DEE-associated KNa1.1 mutations lowered the energetic barrier for sodium-dependent activation, but some also had direct effects on selectivity filter gating. Destabilisation of the inactivated unliganded channel conformation can explain how DEE-causing amino acid substitutions in diverse regions of the channel structure all cause gain-of-function.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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