Rare glutamate receptor variants associated with neurodevelopmental disorders

Published on December 31, 2023   36 min

A selection of talks on Genetics & Epigenetics

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0:00
My name is Ian Coombs. I am a researcher working at University College London in the Department of Neuroscience, Physiology and Pharmacology. I've studied the pharmacology and electrophysiology of glutamate receptors for the last 20 years. Over the last couple of years our groups worked closely with CureGRIN, which is a family led foundation set up to drive research into a newly identified family of rare genetic disorders that affect the ionotropic glutamate receptors.
0:28
What I'm going to about is give an introduction into rare diseases, how they're defined, how they're diagnosed, and also how we can afford to develop drugs to treat them, before talking about my own subject. I'll introduce the glutamate receptors, their structure, their mechanisms of action, and their roles in the brain. Then I'll introduce GRIA and GRIN disorder which are these genetic diseases affecting two classes of glutamate receptor. I'll be demonstrating the numerous ways in which genetic variation can disrupt receptor function. Finally, I'll talk about therapy for GRI disorder, including ongoing efforts to identify precision therapies both through pharmaceutical drugs and gene therapy.
1:09
Rare diseases are defined from the UK Rare Disease Framework as any disease that affects less than one in 2000 of the population. In a country like the UK with a population of around 60 million, if a disease affects less than 30000 people in the country, that will class as a rare disease but of course many are much rarer than that. In fact, over 7000 different rare diseases have been identified. While the individual rare diseases are of course rare, collectively they're not that rare. They affect over five percent of the population as a whole. Research into these diseases is certainly important and 75% of them can affect children, and many are very serious including even some that are fatal. These are commonly caused by genetic factors. These might be de novo changes, so we are 50% our mother and 50% our father, but we are also 0.00000001% error. Over the course of millions of years that counts as evolution. But for a structure as highly evolved as the brain, de novo change is not something that we want to experience and very commonly causes problems. Not all of these diseases are de novo they can be inherited. These can be directly inherited from an affected individual with a dominant disorder, or if both parents have one defective copy of a gene that can come together if the child has both defective copies to produce recessive disease. That again is obviously quite rare. Another class of disease is those found on the X chromosome. Girls have two copies of the X chromosome so they have a backup copy, they can tolerate one deceptive copy of the gene because they have a backup. Males on the other hand only have one X chromosome. If they get a damaged copy either through de novo change or inherited from the mother, they can show signs of X-linked disorders.
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Rare glutamate receptor variants associated with neurodevelopmental disorders

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