Cav1.3 (CACNA1D) L‐type Ca2+ channel dysfunction in CNS disorders

Abstract Cav1.3 belongs to the family of voltage‐gated L‐type Ca2+ channels and is encoded by the CACNA1D gene. Cav1.3 channels are not only essential for cardiac pacemaking, hearing and hormone secretion but are also expressed postsynaptically in neurons, where they shape neuronal firing and plasticity. Recent findings provide evidence that human mutations in the CACNA1D gene can confer risk for the development of neuropsychiatric disease and perhaps also epilepsy. Loss of Cav1.3 function, as shown in knock‐out mouse models and by human mutations, does not result in neuropsychiatric or neurological disease symptoms, whereas their acute selective pharmacological activation results in a depressive‐like behaviour in mice. Therefore it is likely that CACNA1D mutations enhancing activity may be disease relevant also in humans. Indeed, whole exome sequencing studies, originally prompted to identify mutations in primary aldosteronism, revealed de novo CACNA1D missense mutations permitting enhanced Ca2+ signalling through Cav1.3. Remarkably, apart from primary aldosteronism, heterozygous carriers of these mutations also showed seizures and neurological abnormalities. Different missense mutations with very similar gain‐of‐function properties were recently reported in patients with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). These data strongly suggest that CACNA1D mutations enhancing Cav1.3 activity confer a strong risk for – or even cause – CNS disorders, such as ASD.


Introduction
L-type channels are one of three classes of voltage-gated Ca 2+ channels characterized by high sensitivity to channel blockers (Ca 2+ antagonists), such as dihydropyridines. Among the four L-type channel isoforms (Ca v 1.1-1.4), Ca v 1.2 and Ca v 1.3 are expressed in most electrically excitable cells in mammals, including the brain (Koschak et al. 2014;Striessnig et al. 2014Striessnig et al. , 2015Vandael et al. 2015, for recent reviews). Ca 2+ entry through these isoforms supports physiological functions that are mediated by electrical activity, including neurotransmitter release in sensory cells, control of neuronal excitability and plasticity, hormone secretion, heart rhythm and contractility as well as smooth muscle contraction (Hofmann et al. 2014;Koschak et al. 2014;Striessnig et al. 2014Striessnig et al. , 2015Vandael et al. 2015;Zamponi et al. 2015, for recent reviews). However, due to differences in their biophysical properties, protein interactions, expression patterns and modulation by other signalling pathways, they contribute to these physiological functions in different ways Zamponi et al. 2015).
Insight into the physiological functions of Ca v 1.3 has mainly been obtained from Ca v 1.3-deficient and mutant mice (Platzer et al. 2000;Sinnegger-Brauns et al. 2004) and from homozygous loss-of-function mutations in humans (Baig et al. 2011). The essential role of Ca v 1.3 for different organ functions has recently been extensively reviewed (Koschak et al. 2014;Striessnig et al. 2014;Zamponi et al. 2015) and is therefore not discussed in detail here. In the past few years, the discovery of human gain-of-function mutations in CACNA1D, encoding the pore-forming Ca v 1.3 α 1 -subunit, revealed novel physiological and pathophysiological functions of this channel (Azizan et al. 2013;Scholl et al. 2013). Gain-of-function mutations in Ca v 1.2 (CACNA1C) have already been reported in 2004 as the cause for Timothy syndrome (Splawski et al. 2004). Ca v 1.2 is expressed at higher abundance than Ca v 1.3 in the brain and is the major L-type channel isoform in the heart and vascular smooth muscle Zamponi et al. 2015). Timothy syndrome patients exhibit cardiovascular (long-QT syndrome) as well as developmental abnormalities (facial abnormalities, syndactyly), and a large percentage of the affected individuals also show autism, mental retardation and seizures (Splawski et al. 2004(Splawski et al. , 2005. This was the first indication that L-type Ca 2+ channels could contribute to neuropsychiatric and neurological disease. As summarized in recent reviews (Bhat et al. 2012;Smoller et al. 2013;Zamponi et al. 2015) substantial evidence has accumulated since then for a prominent role of CACNA1C single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for neuropsychiatric disease risk. In addition also auxiliary α 2 δ and β subunits as well as other Ca v α 1 -subunits have been implicated in autism spectrum disorders (ASD) (for review Breitenkamp et al. 2015;Soldatov, 2015).
Here we discuss recent evidence from human genetics, strongly pointing to an important role of Ca v 1.3 dysfunction in psychiatric disorders. As Ca v 1.3 channels are also expressed in many tissues outside the brain, CACNA1D missense mutations causing a gain-of-function are likely to be associated with other (syndromic) organ dysfunctions. Indeed, activating Ca v 1.3 missense mutations associated with CNS disorders were first discovered in whole exome sequencing studies identifying a causal role of CACNA1D mutations for primary aldosteronism. We will therefore discuss risk mutations for CNS disorders in the context of mutations causing primary aldosteronism.

Ca v 1.3 dysfunction in primary aldosteronism and CNS disease
The first disorders caused by mutations permitting enhanced Ca v 1.3 Ca 2+ channel activity were discovered as somatic CACNA1D missense mutations in, typically benign, aldosterone-producing adrenal adenomas (APAs) in patients with primary aldosteronism (Azizan et al. 2013;Scholl et al. 2013). APAs are found in about 5% of individuals referred to hypertension clinics. CACNA1D mutations were not the first somatic mutations to be described in APAs responsible for excess aldosterone production in these tumours. Also mutations in genes for the K + -channel, KCNJ5, the Na + /K + -ATPase, ATP1A1, and the Ca 2+ -ATPase, ATP2B3, were identified and all mutation-induced functional changes could be predicted to enhance intracellular Ca 2+ signalling. For example, in the case of ATP1A1 mutations this is due to impaired Na + /K + -ATPase activity which triggers depolarization-induced Ca 2+ entry through voltage-dependent Ca 2+ channels (Azizan et al. 2013;Beuschlein et al. 2013;Scholl et al. 2013).
Somatic mutations in CACNA1D and the other genes are not limited to APAs but are also found in the more frequent multinodular adrenals and in diffuse hyperplasia (Dekkers et al. 2014;Fernandes-Rosa et al. 2015;Scholl et al. 2015a). Only one nodule, usually the aldosterone synthase-positive one, harbours a mutation in multinodular glands suggesting that the mutations are causative in aldosterone hypersecretion but not in nodule formation (Dekkers et al. 2014;Fernandes-Rosa et al. 2015;Scholl et al. 2015a).
Although T-type (Ca v 3 family, Perez-Reyes, 2003;Zamponi et al. 2015 for review) and L-type channels were known to be present in zona glomerulosa cells (Hunyady et al. 1994;Rossier et al. 1996;Hu et al. 2012), activating mutations in CACNA1D and, more recently, also in CACNA1H (Ca v 3.2 T-type channel, Scholl et al. 2015b) outed these channels as the most relevant ones in human aldosterone producing cells. Since Ca 2+ is the critical second messenger responsible for aldosterone production (for details see Barrett et al. in this series) it was likely that the CACNA1D missense mutations induce changes in either channel gating or channel expression that lead to enhanced Ca 2+ entry during electrical activity of a zona glomerulosa cell. So far, at least 24 mutations in 20 different positions have been described in APAs (Fig. 1). Four of these mutations have been experimentally characterized and revealed functional changes compatible with a gain-of-function phenotype (Azizan et al. 2013;Scholl et al. 2013). This involved pronounced slowing of current inactivation during depolarizing stimuli, activation of channel current at more negative voltages and higher single channel open probability. For mutation I750M this will be discussed in more detail below.
Altogether these findings clearly demonstrate that the gating changes induced by the APA mutations result in enhanced Ca 2+ signalling through Ca v 1.3 channels in these tumour cells. It is likely that increased Ca 2+ entry occurs during T-type (Ca v 3.2) Ca 2+ channel-sustained membrane oscillations (Hu et al. 2012). Moreover, this raises the important question whether such mutations could also contribute to the risk for neurological or neuropsychiatric disorders.
Ca v 1.3 channels are widely expressed in the CNS Zamponi et al. 2015 for review) and in neurons with different electrical activity patterns. They affect neuronal activity in a complex manner. Through coupling to Ca 2+ -activated K + channels they contribute to spike-frequency adaptation and post-burst afterhyperpolarization (McKinney et al. 2009), thus decreasing excitability. Conversely, these channels activate at relatively low (subthreshold) voltages, which allows them to create dendritic plateau potentials, during which neurons can fire tonically (Olson et al. 2005). Moreover, Ca v 1.3 signalling is required for normal neuronal development, synapse maturation as well as synaptic pruning (Day et al. 2006;Hirtz et al. 2011Hirtz et al. , 2012. Ca v 1.3 deficiency in mice leads to a relatively benign CNS/sensory phenotype. This includes deafness (due to inner hair cell dysfunction), reduced drug-taking (for details see article by Kabir et al. in this issue) and antidepressant-like behaviour (for recent review see Striessnig et al. 2014;Zamponi et al. 2015). In contrast, acute selective pharmacological activation of Ca v 1.3 channels in vivo in mice (Sinnegger-Brauns et al. 2004;Hetzenauer et al. 2006) induces a depression-like phenotype and neuronal activation in a specific set of mainly limbic, hypothalamic and brainstem areas, which are associated with integration of emotion-related behaviours (Hetzenauer et al. 2006). These experiments were performed in mice expressing dihydropyridine-insensitive Ca v 1.2 channels (Ca v 1.2DHP −/− ). Application of the Ca 2+ channel activator BayK8644 therefore allowed the selective activation of Ca v 1.3 channels in the brain (Sinnegger-Brauns et al. 2004). These animal studies suggest that Ca v 1.3 gain-of-function mutations could also increase risk for CNS abnormalities in humans presenting as neuropsychiatric disorders or epilepsy. Indeed, evidence that dysfunctional Ca v 1.3 channels with gating properties resembling those found in APA mutations (and thus capable of enhancing Ca 2+ currents  Nishimoto et al. 2015;Wang et al. 2015;Scholl et al. 2015a). So far, only mutations V259D, G403D/R, I750M and P1336R have been functionally characterized, and they show strong gain-of-function phenotypes (Azizan et al. 2013;Scholl et al. 2013). G403R and I750M were also identified as de novo germline mutations in two patients with primary aldosteronism, seizures and neurological abnormalities (PASNA), highlighted in blue (Scholl et al. 2013). Mutations identified in individuals with ASD are shown in green. Mutations G407R (exon 8a), A749G and V584I were identified in the affected individuals but absent in parents or unaffected siblings and therefore classified as de novo (Iossifov et al. 2012;O'Roak et al. 2012;De Rubeis et al. 2014). Mutations A59V, S1953L and R1997H were detected in a case-control sample (De Rubeis et al. 2014). Mutations G407R and A749G have been characterized and show a pronounced gain-of-function (Fig. 2, Pinggera et al. 2015). B, alignment of amino acid sequence of transmembrane S6-helices of repeats I and II containing the activation gates at their cytoplasmic ends. They are highly conserved among α 1 subunits of the L-type Ca 2+ channel family. Ca v 1.3 undergoes alternative splicing in the activation gate of repeat I (exons 8a vs. 8b) (Baig et al. 2011). Positions mutated in ASD and PASNA are located in close proximity to each other as indicated in the alignment. Whereas ASD-linked mutation G407R only occurs in exon 8a , G403D was identified in both exons in APAs but was present in exon 8b in PASNA (Scholl et al. 2013). (Alignment was performed by ClustalW using the following reference sequences: Ca v 1.3 EU363339, Ca v 1.1 Q02789, Ca v 1.2 NP_001153005.1, Ca v 1.4 Q9JIS7; conserved residues are highlighted in grey.) through Ca v 1.3 channels) provide a strong risk for CNS disease came from two patients with germline APA mutations (Scholl et al. 2013).

CACNA1D mutations associated with primary aldosteronism with seizures and neurological abnormalities
In the course of characterizing somatic CACNA1D APA mutations, Scholl et al. (2013) discovered two mutations identified in APAs as germline de novo mutations in two patients with primary aldosteronism seizures and neurological abnormalities, a syndrome which was termed PASNA.
Patient 1 carried a copy of the G403D mutation (in alternative exon 8b) and was a 3-year old female of European ancestry with no significant family history (Scholl et al. 2013). After birth she developed sinus bradycardia (day 1), and was successfully treated for transient hypoglycaemia (day 2), respiratory distress (day 3), atrioventricular block with prolonged QT-interval and elevated blood pressure. Echocardiograms demonstrated biventricular hypertrophy, a ventricular septal defect and a patent foramen ovale with mild persistent pulmonary hypertension of the newborn. Primary aldosteronism (elevated aldosterone, low plasma renin activity) and hypokalaemia were diagnosed at age 1 month. Treatment with amlodipine normalized blood pressure, and resolved biventricular hypertrophy. Brain imaging at age 1 month was suggestive of periventricular leukomalacia, two regions with previous haemorrhages (right occipital region and left periventricular parenchyma) and ventriculomegaly. Further development was characterized by failure to thrive and a global developmental delay. Cardiac abnormalities resolved and no evidence for gastrointestinal disease was obtained. The patient developed epilepsy and was diagnosed with cortical blindness, spasticity and cerebral palsy. The first generalized tonic-clonic seizure (month 7) was not associated with brain CT changes and there was no history of febrile illness or evidence for serum electrolyte abnormalities. Despite pharmacotherapy one generalized tonic-clonic seizure per month developed until age 12 months, when seizure frequency increased. EEG showed recurrent spikes emanating predominantly from the right temporoparietal occipital region, and to a lesser extent, independently, from the left temporal region without a clinical correlate. At 3 years she was not ambulatory and not verbal (global developmental delay). The blood pressure and serum K + levels were normal; recent medications included rufinamide, valproic acid, ranitidine, baclofen and levetiracetam (Scholl et al. 2013).
Patient 2 carried a copy of the I750M mutation and was a 10-year old African American female with no significant family history (Scholl et al. 2013). Delivery was by Caesarean section at 41 weeks gestational age after uterine rupture. She required resuscitation and was subsequently diagnosed with cerebral palsy, spastic quadriplegia and mild athetosis, severe generalized intellectual disability, complex partial seizures of likely right hemispheric origin, generalized seizures, a movement disorder with verbal outbursts, and a sleep disorder. Treatment included oxcarbazepine, risperidone and later levetiracetam. Brain MRI was normal. The patient developed hypertension before the age of 5 years and at the age of 8 years also significant hypokalaemia. In addition, high aldosterone levels were found despite suppressed plasma renin activity. Abdominal CT scan at the age of 9 years showed normal appearance of the adrenal glands. Mild left ventricular hypertrophy was noted on echocardiogram. Hypertension was treated with clonidine, and later spironolactone (Scholl et al. 2013).
There was no family history of early-onset hypertension or seizures in these patients. A common finding is the presence of hyperaldosteronism (with hypertension and hypokalaemia), seizures and generalized intellectual disability and spasticity. Hyperaldosteronism is a symptom expected from these mutations. The presence of seizures in both patients suggests that Ca v 1.3 gain-of-function may also contribute to epilepsy risk.
Based on the published medical histories, it cannot be excluded that severe perinatal complications (asphyxia in patient 1, resuscitation in patient 2) caused the epilepsy in both patients. However, this neurological phenotype also prompted us to screen the literature for additional CACNA1D variants reported in epilepsy. Klassen et al. performed parallel exome sequencing of 237 ion channel genes in a well-characterized human sample of epilepsy patients with presumed genetic origin (Klassen et al. 2011). Their study showed that disease risk from even deleterious ion channel mutations can be modified by variants in other ion channel proteins present in the same individual. In CACNA1D they found (in addition to coding synonymous, intronic mutations and one splice-site mutation) one premature stop, and three missense mutations that occurred in probands but not in controls ( Table 1). All of them occur in functionally sensitive regions of the channel. Two of them, A519P and Q1598X, are highly likely to affect channel function and have not been reported in > 120,000 alleles in the Exome Aggregation Consortium (ExAC) database. ExAC collects whole exome sequencing data from 60,706 unrelated individuals with no severe paediatric diseases as a useful reference set of allele frequencies for severe disease studies (Exome Aggregation Consortium (ExAC), Cambridge, MA, USA, http://exac.broadinstitute.org, accessed September 2015). A519P introduces a proline at the C-terminal end of the cytoplasmic I-II linker. As recently shown this region forms a conserved polybasic helical structure that interacts with lipid headgroups at J Physiol 594.20 Only mutations observed in patients but not in matched controls are listed. Reference sequence is EU363339, except for P1318S (NM_000720). Amino acid sequence is given in single letter amino acid code; the position of mutated residues is indicated in bold.
the plasma membrane. In Ca v 1.2 channels it stabilizes channel function and mediates channel inhibition by phospholipase C-induced phosphoinositide breakdown (Kaur et al. 2015). The high conservation of this motif suggests a similar role in all L-type channels (Kaur et al. 2015). Like charge neutralizing mutations, the A519P mutation is therefore expected to interfere with normal channel gating and/or inhibitory control by receptor-mediated phospholipid breakdown (Hille et al. 2014 . If the allele carrying mutation Q1598X results in the expression of a functional α 1 subunit protein then apo-CaM binding to this region must be decreased. This should reduce open probability but also Ca 2+ -dependent inactivation making Ca 2+ influx more long lasting. In the brain the function of this IQ-motif is already heavily regulated by RNA editing (Huang et al. 2012) and alternative splicing (Shen et al. 2006;Tan et al. 2011) creating Ca v 1.3 channels with reduced or absent CaM regulation. Mutant Q1598X channels could therefore enhance the number of channels with 'CaM-free' gating properties, which may lead to enhanced Ca 2+ signalling through persistent Ca v 1.3 current components (Huang et al. 2012). Currently, a contribution of these mutations to overall epilepsy risk in the affected patients remains speculative. However, if gating changes compatible with gain of channel function can be demonstrated in heterologous expression studies of these mutants, this would strongly support a role for CACNA1D in idiopathic epilepsy. As discussed below, this has potential clinical implications since L-type Ca 2+ channel blockers available for treatment of hypertension could be beneficial in patients identified with such mutations.

CACNA1D mutations associated with autism spectrum disorders
Whole exome sequencing also revealed two de novo mutations in autistic children of the Simons Simplex Collection (Figs 1 and 2). Intriguingly, these mutations are localized in close proximity to PASNA and APA mutations, suggesting a high contribution to disease risk in these patients (Fig. 1). As discussed in recent reviews Zamponi et al. 2015), this is further supported by the known functions of Ca v 1.3 for synapse formation and neuronal excitability as well as the fact that very similar mutations in structurally and functionally highly related Ca v 1.2 channels (CACNA1C gene; see above) can also cause autism (Splawski et al. 2004). Patient 1 harbouring one copy of the A749G mutation (O'Roak et al. 2012) is a Caucasian female and was diagnosed with ASD at 94 months. Her full IQ score was 62, the verbal and non-verbal IQ scores of 67 and 65, respectively. The patient carried another risk mutation in KATNAL2 with unknown physiological function (O'Roak et al. 2012) (patient information was obtained from the Simons Simplex collection, https://sfari. org/resources/autism-cohorts/simons-simplex-collection, with permission and with approval by the local institutional review board).
Patient 2 carrying the G407R mutation (Iossifov et al. 2012) is a Hispanic male and was diagnosed at an age of 15 years with ASD. He has a full IQ score of 83, verbal and non-verbal IQ scores of 81 and 88, respectively. In addition, a synonymous mutation in ADAMTSL1 was found in this patient (Iossifov et al. 2012). He was also diagnosed with a congenital heart problem at 1 month. Seizures, anxiety or depressive disorders and hyperaldosteronism were not reported in the patient records.
When heterologously expressed in tsA-201 cells together with accessory βand α 2 δ-subunits, both mutations induced strong functional changes very similar to the two PASNA mutations. G407R closely resembled G403D (compare data in Azizan et al. 2013vs. Pinggera et al. 2015 whereas A749G resulted in alterations comparable to I750M (Azizan et al. 2013;Pinggera et al. 2015; Fig. 2). Both shifted the voltage dependence of activation and inactivation to more hyperpolarized potentials. This enables mutant channels to activate at more negative membrane potentials thus representing a gain-of-function phenotype. The hyperpolarizing shift of the voltage dependence of inactivation on the other hand reduces the amount of active channels at physiological potentials. Especially in neurons with more depolarized membrane potentials (e.g. dopamine neurons in the substantia nigra) this could also reduce channel availability. In addition, A749G resulted in faster inactivation kinetics during depolarizing stimuli compared to I750M (Fig. 2). Faster inactivation in turn is expected to decrease Ca 2+ influx through Ca v 1.3 channels in neurons during repetitive firing and might also reduce upstate potentials. Due to its non-inactivating component, mutation I750M results in an increased window current, which represents the voltage range where the channels can be activated but are not completely inactivated, thus again representing a gain of function. A749G on the contrary reduces the window current due to the strong hyperpolarizing shift of the voltage dependence of inactivation and the faster inactivation kinetics. However, in fast spiking neurons a more negative activation range is expected to enhance Ca 2+ current through A749G channels. Therefore the net effect of these mutations on Ca v 1.3 Ca 2+ signalling may vary depending on the firing pattern and action potential shape of a neuron.
Using 9937 ancestry-matched or parental controls. Many of the identified risk variants encoded proteins implicated in synapse formation, transcriptional regulation and chromatin remodelling pathways. Amongst the critical synaptic components found to be mutated were also voltage-gated ion channels, including missense variants in CACNA1D and two loss-of-function variants in CACNA2D3, which encodes the α 2 δ-3 subunit (interacting with different L-and non-L-type Ca 2+ channels; for review Dolphin, 2013). This study confirmed the de novo A749G and G407R risk mutations, but also identified an additional de novo mutation (V584I) and three other risk variants (Fig. 1) in a case-control population. None of the newly identified mutations has been functionally characterized so far. A59V is located in an N-terminal CaM interaction site (NSCaTE; Dick et al. 2008) and may thus affect the inactivation properties of the channel. This region is also highly conserved in Ca v 1.2 channels and the variant is not reported as a variant in the ExAC database.
Mutations S1953L and R1997H in the C-terminal tail have been reported in the ExAC database (three S1953L, one S1953P; one R1997H, two R1997C). Moreover these residues are not conserved between Ca v 1.3 and Ca v 1.2. Their potential to contribute to ASD risk is therefore less obvious than for G407R and A749G. This is also true for the de novo mutation V584I for which two variants were reported in ExAC sequencing data.
If strong gain-of-function mutations as observed in APAs confer a high risk for PASNA and ASD, carriers are expected to present with CNS symptoms earlier in life and would therefore less likely show up in the ExAC control population, whereas this may not be true for mutations contributing lower risk. We screened the ExAC data for the presence of APA mutations and found variants corresponding to four mutated CACNA1D loci affected in APAs. One variant resulted in a glycine insertion after position 402 (p.Leu402 Gly403insGly) in exon 8b. An additional variant was reported in position 652, but in contrast to the corresponding APA mutation S652L (Fig. 2), this variant leads to mutation to a tryptophan. Mutation L655P was identified only once. Another mutation, V728I, was identified in 41 of > 121,400 alleles. All carriers were heterozygous for the variants. The glycine insertion at position 403 in CACNA1D leads to a non-conducting channel due to impaired coupling of voltage sensing to pore opening (Baig et al. 2011). Therefore p.Leu402 Gly403insGly must result in a loss of function, which is not expected to cause a phenotype in the heterozygous state (Platzer et al. 2000;Baig et al. 2011). Mutations V728I, S652L and L655P have not been characterized so far. However, the fact that they all occur in the ExAC database suggests that the mutations, in particular V728I, might confer less risk to severe paediatric disease, perhaps by inducing more moderate gating changes.

Conclusion
Taken together we hypothesize that gain-of-function CACNA1D mutations differ with respect to their contribution to CNS disease risk. Mutations causing strong changes in channel gating, similar to those reported in PASNA and some of the APA mutations (e.g. G403R, V259D), may convey a very high disease risk. Abnormal neuronal Ca 2+ signalling by these dysfunctional channels may not be easily compensated by variants in other genes (e.g. encoding ion channels; Klassen et al. 2011) and thus lead to disease symptoms in the vast majority of carriers. On the other side of the spectrum, APA mutations such as V728I may manifest as primary aldosteronism without CNS symptoms in humans when present in the germline. This would explain the high number of carriers in the ExAC database. In the brain such rare CACNA1D variants inducing more subtle changes in Ca v 1.3 function may only be of disease relevance in a permissive genetic background.
To prove this hypothesis more patients need to be identified with either PASNA, ASD with or without seizures or primary aldosteronism and strongly gating modifying de novo germline mutations in CACNA1D. If this is the case and the corresponding mutations (like G407R, A749G) retain their sensitivity to brain-permeant L-type Ca 2+ channel blockers (such as isradipine, nifedipine or nimodipine), experimental therapies with these drugs in affected patients would be justified. If a contribution of such mutations to epileptic symptoms (in idiopathic epilepsy or as co-morbidity in PASNA or, perhaps, autism) can also be demonstrated, these drugs may even be added to antiepileptic therapy.
In the last few years next generation sequencing has provided us with exciting novel insight into the aggregate burden of genetic variants. We are only at the beginning of understanding the role of de novo mutations in voltage-gated L-type Ca 2+ channels for sporadic cases of CNS disorders. To better comprehend how distinct CACNA1D mutations contribute to different human disorders, further functional analysis of more high risk Ca v 1.3 mutations reported in affected patients is important. Mutations activating these channels may not only confer enhanced risk for neuropsychiatric disease, as described in this article, but also for neurodegenerative disorders, in particular Parkinson's disease. Recent work has provided strong evidence that L-type channel mediated Ca 2+ entry contributes to oxidative stress underlying the high vulnerability of substantia nigra neurons to cell death (Sulzer & Surmeier, 2013). Therefore studying these human mutations in mice must be the next step to understand their disease-causing potential in humans.