MECHANOSENSITIVE ION CHANNEL DYSFUNCTION IN NEURODEVELOPMENT: <EM >TMEM63B</EM> VARIANTS DRIVE SEVERE EPILEPTIC ENCEPHALOPATHY AND NEURODEGENERATION
Meyer Children's Hospital IRCCS
Presentation
Date TBA
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Poster Board
PS02-07PM-348
Poster
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To investigate the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms, we expressed selected TMEM63B variants in Neuro2A cells and generated induced pluripotent stem cells from two patients, which were differentiated into neural progenitor cells (NPCs) and mature cortical neurons. Mechanosensory function and neuronal network activity were assessed using hypotonic stress and controlled mechanical stimulation with dual-laser optical tweezers, combined with calcium imaging, patch-clamp electrophysiology, and multi-electrode array recordings.
Heterologous expression of TMEM63B variants resulted in constitutive inward leak currents under isotonic conditions and impaired calcium signaling in response to hypotonic stress. Patient-derived NPCs displayed significantly reduced mechanically evoked calcium responses, confirming defective mechanosensation. In mature neurons, TMEM63B variants led to reduced intrinsic excitability but increased spontaneous excitatory synaptic activity, consistent with compensatory synaptic scaling. Notably, seizure-like events were observed exclusively in patient-derived neuronal networks.
Together, these findings demonstrate that TMEM63B variants disrupt mechanosensitive signaling and alter neuronal excitability, providing a cellular basis for the DEE phenotype. Importantly, these patient-specific neural models represent a valuable platform for identifying novel therapeutic targets and support precision medicine approaches for drug-resistant DEE.
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