A calcium channel mutation causing hypokalemic periodic paralysis

K Jurkat-Rott, F Lehmann-Horn, A Elbaz… - Human Molecular …, 1994 - academic.oup.com
K Jurkat-Rott, F Lehmann-Horn, A Elbaz, R Heine, RG Gregg, K Hogan, PA Powers, P Laple…
Human Molecular Genetics, 1994academic.oup.com
The only calcium channel mutation reported to date is a deletion in the gene for the DHP-
receptor α1-subunit resulting in neonatal death in muscular dysgenesis mice (1). In humans,
this gene maps to chromosome 1q31–32. An autosomal dominant muscle disease,
hypokalemic periodic paralysis (HypoPP), has been mapped to the same region (2).
Sequencing of cDNA of two patients revealed a G-to-A base exchange of nucleotide 1583
predicting a substitution of histldine for arglnine528. This affects the outermost positive …
Abstract
The only calcium channel mutation reported to date is a deletion in the gene for the DHP-receptor α1-subunit resulting in neonatal death in muscular dysgenesis mice (1). In humans, this gene maps to chromosome 1q31–32. An autosomal dominant muscle disease, hypokalemic periodic paralysis (HypoPP), has been mapped to the same region (2). Sequencing of cDNA of two patients revealed a G-to-A base exchange of nucleotide 1583 predicting a substitution of histldine for arglnine528. This affects the outermost positive charge in the transmembrane segment IIS4 that Is considered to participate in voltage sensing. By restriction fragment analysis, the mutation was detected in the affected members of 9 out of 25 HypoPP families. The results indicate that the DHP-receptor a1-subunit mutation causes HypoPP. An altered excitation-contraction coupling may explain the occurrence of muscle weakness.
Oxford University Press