Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface and overview
- 1 Epilepsies as channelopathies
- 2 Epilepsy and movement disorders in the GABAA receptor β3 subunit knockout mouse: model of Angelman syndrome
- 3 Genetic reflex epilepsy from chicken to man: relations between genetic reflex epilepsy and movement disorders
- 4 Functional MRI of the motor cortex
- 5 Neuromagnetic methods and transcranial magnetic stimulation for testing sensorimotor cortex excitability
- 6 Motor dysfunction resulting from epileptic activity involving the sensorimotor cortex
- 7 Nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy
- 8 Motor cortex hyperexcitability in dystonia
- 9 The paroxysmal dyskinesias
- 10 Normal startle and startle-induced epileptic seizures
- 11 Hyperekplexia: genetics and culture-bound stimulus-induced disorders
- 12 Myoclonus and epilepsy
- 13 The spectrum of epilepsy and movement disorders in EPC
- 14 Seizures, myoclonus and cerebellar dysfunction in progressive myoclonus epilepsies
- 15 Opercular epilepsies with oromotor dysfunction
- 16 Facial seizures associated with brainstem and cerebellar lesions
- 17 Neonatal movement disorders: epileptic or non-epileptic
- 18 Epileptic and non-epileptic periodic motor phenomena in children with encephalopathy
- 19 Epileptic stereotypies in children
- 20 Non-epileptic paroxysmal eye movements
- 21 Shuddering and benign myoclonus of early infancy
- 22 Epilepsy and cerebral palsy
- 23 Sydenham chorea
- 24 Alternating hemiplegia of childhood
- 25 Motor attacks in Sturge–Weber syndrome
- 26 Syndromes with epilepsy and paroxysmal dyskinesia
- 27 Epilepsy genes: the search grows longer
- 28 Genetics of the overlap between epilepsy and movement disorders
- 29 Seizures and movement disorders precipitated by drugs
- 30 Steroid responsive motor disorders associated with epilepsy
- 31 Drugs for epilepsy and movement disorders
- Index
- Plate section
2 - Epilepsy and movement disorders in the GABAA receptor β3 subunit knockout mouse: model of Angelman syndrome
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface and overview
- 1 Epilepsies as channelopathies
- 2 Epilepsy and movement disorders in the GABAA receptor β3 subunit knockout mouse: model of Angelman syndrome
- 3 Genetic reflex epilepsy from chicken to man: relations between genetic reflex epilepsy and movement disorders
- 4 Functional MRI of the motor cortex
- 5 Neuromagnetic methods and transcranial magnetic stimulation for testing sensorimotor cortex excitability
- 6 Motor dysfunction resulting from epileptic activity involving the sensorimotor cortex
- 7 Nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy
- 8 Motor cortex hyperexcitability in dystonia
- 9 The paroxysmal dyskinesias
- 10 Normal startle and startle-induced epileptic seizures
- 11 Hyperekplexia: genetics and culture-bound stimulus-induced disorders
- 12 Myoclonus and epilepsy
- 13 The spectrum of epilepsy and movement disorders in EPC
- 14 Seizures, myoclonus and cerebellar dysfunction in progressive myoclonus epilepsies
- 15 Opercular epilepsies with oromotor dysfunction
- 16 Facial seizures associated with brainstem and cerebellar lesions
- 17 Neonatal movement disorders: epileptic or non-epileptic
- 18 Epileptic and non-epileptic periodic motor phenomena in children with encephalopathy
- 19 Epileptic stereotypies in children
- 20 Non-epileptic paroxysmal eye movements
- 21 Shuddering and benign myoclonus of early infancy
- 22 Epilepsy and cerebral palsy
- 23 Sydenham chorea
- 24 Alternating hemiplegia of childhood
- 25 Motor attacks in Sturge–Weber syndrome
- 26 Syndromes with epilepsy and paroxysmal dyskinesia
- 27 Epilepsy genes: the search grows longer
- 28 Genetics of the overlap between epilepsy and movement disorders
- 29 Seizures and movement disorders precipitated by drugs
- 30 Steroid responsive motor disorders associated with epilepsy
- 31 Drugs for epilepsy and movement disorders
- Index
- Plate section
Summary
GABAA receptor structure and function: multiple subunit genes, and implications for epilepsy and movement disorders?
γ-Aminobutyric acid type A (GABAA) receptors (GABAR) mediate the bulk of rapid inhibitory synaptic transmission in the central nervous system (Olsen & DeLorey, 1999). The GABAR belong to the superfamily of ligand-gated ion channel receptors, i.e. they are ion channel proteins whose opening is controlled by the binding of the neurotransmitter (DeLorey & Olsen, 1992). These GABAR are a family of heteropentamers formed from a family of at least 19 related subunits in mammals, named α(1–6), β(1–4), γ(1–3), δ, ε, π, and ρ(1–3) (Tyndale et al., 1995; Davies et al., 1997; Hedblom & Kirkness, 1997). Splicing variants exist for some subunits, primarily related to phosphorylation substrates in the intracellular loop, e.g. the γ2 subunit longer version (γ2L) contains an 8 amino acid insert in the cytoplasmic loop that contains a consensus substrate site for phosphorylation by protein kinase C that is missing in γ2S (Burt & Kamatchi, 1991; McKernan & Whiting, 1996). Important CNS drug targets are present on GABAR, notably sites for the benzodiazepines, barbiturates, neurosteroids, other general anesthetics, and picrotoxin-like convulsants (Macdonald & Olsen, 1994). The individual subunits show variable regional and temporal expression. A dozen or more heteropentameric isoforms of the GABAR occur naturally with reasonable abundance; these exhibit various pharmacological properties and presumably biological properties as well (Lüddens et al., 1995; McKernan & Whiting, 1996; Barnard et al., 1998).
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- Epilepsy and Movement Disorders , pp. 15 - 28Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001