bellows-glucosemetabolism-2014.pdf (133.95 kB)
Download fileGlucose metabolism transporters and epilepsy: only GLUT1 has an established role
journal contribution
posted on 2014-02-01, 00:00 authored by Michael S Hildebrand, John A Damiano, Saul A Mullen, Susannah Bellows, Karen L Oliver, Hans-Henrik M Dahl, Ingrid E Scheffer, Samuel F BerkovicThe availability of glucose, and its glycolytic product lactate, for cerebral energy metabolism is regulated by specific brain transporters. Inadequate energy delivery leads to neurologic impairment. Haploinsufficiency of the glucose transporter GLUT1 causes a characteristic early onset encephalopathy, and has recently emerged as an important cause of a variety of childhood or later-onset generalized epilepsies and paroxysmal exercise-induced dyskinesia. We explored whether mutations in the genes encoding the other major glucose (GLUT3) or lactate (MCT1/2/3/4) transporters involved in cerebral energy metabolism also cause generalized epilepsies. A cohort of 119 cases with myoclonic astatic epilepsy or early onset absence epilepsy was screened for nucleotide variants in these five candidate genes. No epilepsy-causing mutations were identified, indicating that of the major energetic fuel transporters in the brain, only GLUT1 is clearly associated with generalized epilepsy.
History
Journal
EpilepsiaVolume
55Issue
2Pagination
e18 - e21Publisher
WileyLocation
Chichester, Eng.Publisher DOI
Link to full text
eISSN
1528-1167Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2014, International League Against EpilepsyUsage metrics
Categories
Keywords
GLUT1 deficiencyGeneralized epilepsyGlucose metabolismGlucose transporterLactate transporterChildChild, PreschoolCohort StudiesEnergy MetabolismEpilepsyFemaleGenetic VariationGlucoseGlucose Transporter Type 1HumansInfantMaleMutationScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicineClinical NeurologyNeurosciences & NeurologyGLUCOSE-TRANSPORTER-1 DEFICIENCYBRAINEXPRESSION