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Bioelectric signalling via potassium channels: a mechanism for craniofacial dysmorphogenesis in KCNJ2-associated Andersen-Tawil Syndrome

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posted on 2024-11-02, 01:23 authored by Dany Adams, Sebastien Uzel, Jin Akagi, Donald WlodkowicDonald Wlodkowic, Viktoria Andreeva, Pamela Yelick, Adrian Devitt-Lee, Jean-Francois Pare, Michael Levin
Variants in potassium channel KCNJ2 cause Andersen-Tawil Syndrome (ATS); the induced craniofacial anomalies (CFAs) are entirely unexplained. We show that KCNJ2 is expressed in Xenopus and mouse during the earliest stages of craniofacial development. Misexpression in Xenopus of KCNJ2 carrying ATS-associated mutations causes CFAs in the same structures affected in humans, changes the normal pattern of membrane voltage potential regionalization in the developing face and disrupts expression of important craniofacial patterning genes, revealing the endogenous control of craniofacial patterning by bioelectric cell states. By altering cells' resting potentials using other ion translocators, we show that a change in ectodermal voltage, not tied to a specific protein or ion, is sufficient to cause CFAs. By adapting optogenetics for use in non-neural cells in embryos, we show that developmentally patterned K+ flux is required for correct regionalization of the resting potentials and for establishment of endogenous early gene expression domains in the anterior ectoderm, and that variants in KCNJ2 disrupt this regionalization, leading to the CFAs seen in ATS patients.

History

Journal

Journal of Physiology

Volume

594

Issue

12

Start page

3245

End page

3270

Total pages

26

Publisher

Blackwell Publishing

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2016 The Authors

Former Identifier

2006067435

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2016-12-08

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