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Publication : Deletion of the K(V)1.1 potassium channel causes epilepsy in mice.

First Author  Smart SL Year  1998
Journal  Neuron Volume  20
Issue  4 Pages  809-19
PubMed ID  9581771 Mgi Jnum  J:47349
Mgi Id  MGI:1203332 Doi  10.1016/s0896-6273(00)81018-1
Citation  Smart SL, et al. (1998) Deletion of the K(V)1.1 potassium channel causes epilepsy in mice. Neuron 20(4):809-19 HUMAN
abstractText  Mice lacking the voltage-gated potassium channel a subunit, K(v)1.1, display frequent spontaneous seizures throughout adult life. In hippocampal slices from homozygous K(v)1.1 null animals, intrinsic passive properties of CA3 pyramidal cells are normal. However, antidromic action potentials are recruited at lower thresholds in K(v)1.1 null slices. Furthermore, in a subset of slices, mossy fiber stimulation triggers synaptically mediated long-latency epileptiform burst discharges. These data indicate that loss of K(v)1.1 from its normal localization in axons and terminals of the CA3 region results in increased excitability in the CA3 recurrent axon collateral system, perhaps contributing to the limbic and tonic-clonic components of the observed epileptic phenotype. Axonal action potential conduction was altered as well in the sciatic nerve-a deficit potentially related to the pathophysiology of episodic ataxia/myokymia, a disease associated with missense mutations of the human K(v)1.1 gene.
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