The novel hyperekplexia allele GLRA1(S267N) affects the ethanol site of the glycine receptor

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Abstract

Mutations in the GLRA1 gene, which encodes the α1-subunit of the inhibitory glycine receptor (GlyR), are the underlying causes in the majority of cases of hereditary startle disease (OMIM no. 149400). GlyRs are modulated by alcohols and volatile anesthetics, where a specific amino acid at position 267 has been implicated in receptor modulation. We describe a hyperekplexia family carrying the novel dominant missense allele GLRA1(S267N), that affects agonist responses and ethanol modulation of the mutant receptor. This study implies that a disease-related receptor allele carries the potential to alter drug responses in affected patients.

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Becker, K., Breitinger, H. G., Humeny, A., Meinck, H. M., Dietz, B., Aksu, F., & Becker, C. M. (2008). The novel hyperekplexia allele GLRA1(S267N) affects the ethanol site of the glycine receptor. European Journal of Human Genetics, 16(2), 223–228. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ejhg.5201958

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