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Publication : Decreased viability and absence-like epilepsy in mice lacking or deficient in the GABAA receptor α1 subunit.

First Author  Arain FM Year  2012
Journal  Epilepsia Volume  53
Issue  8 Pages  e161-5
PubMed ID  22812724 Mgi Jnum  J:186685
Mgi Id  MGI:5432912 Doi  10.1111/j.1528-1167.2012.03596.x
Citation  Arain FM, et al. (2012) Decreased viability and absence-like epilepsy in mice lacking or deficient in the GABAA receptor alpha1 subunit. Epilepsia 53(8):e161-5
abstractText  Autosomal dominant mutations S326fs328X and A322D in the GABA(A) receptor alpha1 subunit are associated with human absence epilepsy and juvenile myoclonic epilepsy, respectively. Because these mutations substantially reduce alpha1 subunit protein expression in vitro, it was hypothesized that they produce epilepsy by causing alpha1 subunit haploinsufficiency. However, in a mixed background strain of mice, alpha1 subunit deletion does not reduce viability or cause visually apparent seizures; the effects of alpha1 subunit deletion on electroencephalography (EEG) waveforms were not investigated. Here, we determined the effects of alpha1 subunit loss on viability, EEG spike-wave discharges and seizures in congenic C57BL/6J and DBA/2J mice. Deletion of alpha1 subunit caused strain- and sex-dependent reductions in viability. Heterozygous mice experienced EEG discharges and absence-like seizures within both background strains, and exhibited a sex-dependent effect on the discharges and viability in the C57BL/6J strain. These findings suggest that alpha1 subunit haploinsufficiency can produce epilepsy and may be a major mechanism by which the S326fs328X and A322D mutations cause these epilepsy syndromes.
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