OAK

Brain somatic mutations in MTOR reveal translational dysregulations underlying intractable focal epilepsy

Metadata Downloads
Abstract
Brain somatic mutations confer genomic diversity in the human brain and cause neurodevelopmental disorders. Recently, brain somatic activating mutations in MTOR have been identified as a major etiology of intractable epilepsy in patients with cortical malformations. However, the molecular genetic mechanism of how brain somatic mutations in MTOR cause intractable epilepsy has remained elusive. In this study, translational profiling of intractable epilepsy mouse models with brain somatic mutations and genome-edited cells revealed a novel translational dysregulation mechanism and mTOR activation-sensitive targets mediated by human MTOR mutations that lead to intractable epilepsy with cortical malformation. These mTOR targets were found to be regulated by novel mTOR-responsive 5'-UTR motifs, distinct from known mTOR inhibition-sensitive targets regulated by 5' terminal oligopyrimidine motifs. Novel mTOR target genes were validated in patient brain tissues, and the mTOR downstream effector eIF4E was identified as a new therapeutic target in intractable epilepsy via pharmacological or genetic inhibition. We show that metformin, an FDA-approved eIF4E inhibitor, suppresses intractable epilepsy. Altogether, the present study describes translational dysregulation resulting from brain somatic mutations in MTOR, as well as the pathogenesis and potential therapeutic targets of intractable epilepsy.
Author(s)
Kim, Jang KeunCho, JunKim, Se HoonKang, Hoon-ChulKim, Dong-SeokKim, V. NarryLee, Jeong Ho
Issued Date
2019-10
Type
Article
DOI
10.1172/JCI127032
URI
https://scholar.gist.ac.kr/handle/local/8839
Publisher
American Society for Clinical Investigation
Citation
Journal of Clinical Investigation, v.129, no.10, pp.4207 - 4223
ISSN
0021-9738
Appears in Collections:
Department of Biomedical Science and Engineering > 1. Journal Articles
공개 및 라이선스
  • 공개 구분공개
파일 목록
  • 관련 파일이 존재하지 않습니다.

Items in Repository are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.