The causative genes for essential tremor (ET), one of the most common genetic neurological disorders, have eluded scientists despite intensive search. Two gene loci linked to ET, one on chromosome 3q13 and another on chromosome 2p24.1, have been identified, and a missense mutation in the HS1-BP3 gene on the 2p has been suggested as the cause of the disorder in about 10% of American ET patients. Therefore, the genetic basis for the vast majority of familial ET is still unknown. In this issue of the JCI, the gene coding for the γ-aminobutyric acidA (GABAA) receptor α1 subunit is suggested as a potential candidate gene for ET, as mice lacking the gene express a phenotype that overlaps with some clinical characteristics of the human condition.
Joseph Jankovic, Jeffrey L. Noebels
Title and authors | Publication | Year |
---|---|---|
Selective loss of the GABA Aα1 subunit from Purkinje cells is sufficient to induce a tremor phenotype
A Nietz, C Krook-Magnuson, H Gutierrez, J Klein, C Sauve, I Hoff, ZC Wick, E Krook-Magnuson |
Journal of neurophysiology | 2020 |
Systematic Reviews of Animal Models: Methodology versus Epistemology
Greek R, Menache A |
International journal of medical sciences | 2013 |
Use of antiepileptic drugs for hyperkinetic movement disorders
A Siniscalchi, L Gallelli, GD Sarro |
Current neuropharmacology | 2010 |
Pulmonary surfactant: an immunological perspective
ZC Chroneos, Z Sever-Chroneos, VL Shepherd |
Cellular physiology and biochemistry : international journal of experimental cellular physiology, biochemistry, and pharmacology | 2009 |
Antiepileptic Drugs in Non-Epilepsy Disorders: Relations between Mechanisms of Action and Clinical Efficacy
CJ Landmark |
CNS Drugs | 2008 |
Rodent models of tremor
H Miwa |
The Cerebellum | 2007 |