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1  arrhythmia syndromes (also known as cardiac channelopathies).
2 entially lethal but highly treatable cardiac channelopathy.
3  cellular mechanisms underlying an inherited channelopathy.
4 ng in a unique clinical syndrome termed CRAC channelopathy.
5 tion of the functional phenotype of a sodium channelopathy.
6 ns, we hypothesized that TPP might also be a channelopathy.
7 entially lethal yet highly treatable cardiac channelopathy.
8 is the commonest genetic skeletal muscle ion channelopathy.
9 igenic dyskinesia has been shown not to be a channelopathy.
10 first example of a novel class of autoimmune channelopathy.
11 therapeutic approaches for treatment of this channelopathy.
12 confirms that the disorder is a postsynaptic channelopathy.
13 ilure, illustrating a mechanism for acquired channelopathy.
14 f a new chloride channel family and VMD as a channelopathy.
15 rdia is an uncommon, potentially lethal, ion channelopathy.
16 idence-based treatment for a skeletal muscle channelopathy.
17 eart disorders, such as cardiomyopathies and channelopathies.
18 can serve as a therapeutic target for sodium channelopathies.
19 nd therapy for a range of debilitating Na(V) channelopathies.
20 a variety of neurological and cardiovascular channelopathies.
21 rrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia or channelopathies.
22  provide new insights into the mechanisms of channelopathies.
23 es are responsible for a growing spectrum of channelopathies.
24 ine, that share features with rare monogenic channelopathies.
25 annels or their interacting proteins, termed channelopathies.
26 he nondystrophic myotonias, and other muscle channelopathies.
27 thophysiology associated with the respective channelopathies.
28 loping new drugs for treating pain and Na(v) channelopathies.
29 broader impact of gating pore current in ion channelopathies.
30 make a precise molecular diagnosis in muscle channelopathies.
31 the molecular basis of a distinct set of Kv7 channelopathies.
32 mplications for the pathophysiology of human channelopathies.
33 e-modulated channels and CNG channel-related channelopathies.
34 e. SUD) and most likely secondary to cardiac channelopathies.
35 ts or regulatory proteins are referred to as channelopathies.
36 perone that rescues channel function in some channelopathies.
37 f protein misfolding, a fundamental cause of channelopathies.
38 ivation as well as their mutants involved in channelopathies.
39  gating pore currents reminiscent of several channelopathies.
40 epilepsies have emerged as a new category of channelopathies.
41 cause disease conditions collectively termed channelopathies.
42 herapeutics as anticancer agents or to treat channelopathies.
43 and as potential therapeutics for cancer and channelopathies.
44 d to vision-threatening retinal degenerative channelopathies.
45  from new insights into mechanisms of sodium channelopathies.
46 nderstanding of the pathophysiology of TRPV4 channelopathies.
47 omplex arrhythmogenic phenotypes of Na(V)1.5 channelopathies.
48 systems will be critical in the treatment of channelopathies.
49 and inform precision treatment across sodium channelopathies.
50 ble predictions for future study of h- and m-channelopathies.
51  elucidate the phenotypic spectrum of Nav1.9 channelopathies.
52 s and targets to treat and/or prevent sodium channelopathies.
53 ion of ion channels is linked to a myriad of channelopathies.
54  clinical features of inherited neurological channelopathies.
55  adds ET to the growing list of neurological channelopathies.
56 nically relevant brain areas associated with channelopathies.
57  posttranslational modifications in acquired channelopathies.
58 ial to provide important insight into sodium channelopathies.
59 neuromuscular symptoms collectively known as channelopathies.
60 nic mechanisms, even in inherited, monogenic channelopathies.
61 physiological aspects of the skeletal muscle channelopathies.
62        These included the following: (1) Na+ channelopathies; (2) arrhythmias due to K+ channel mutat
63 the growing number of diseases identified as channelopathies, 3 are sufficiently prevalent to represe
64 , and metabolic mechanisms of this heritable channelopathy - a heterogeneity that is reflected in the
65                   However, as for the muscle channelopathies, a striking feature is that many neurona
66                             Genetic neuronal channelopathies affecting peripheral axons provide a uni
67 view focuses on the pathogenic mechanisms of channelopathies affecting skeletal muscle and brain aris
68                                              Channelopathies affecting the hyperpolarization-activate
69 ly relevant cellular perturbations in muscle channelopathies affecting the muscle-specific sodium-cha
70                                          The channelopathies also show evidence of phenotypic diverge
71 rtant player in the pathogenesis of skin TRP channelopathies and a potential target for treatment of
72 ters and to convince chemists to look beyond channelopathies and anticancer activity as applications
73 medicine, such as chemotherapeutics to treat channelopathies and anticancer agents.
74 urgent currents are associated with multiple channelopathies and are likely to be important contribut
75 are due to acquired heart disease, inherited channelopathies and cardiomyopathies disproportionately
76  role in non-long-QT syndrome arrhythmogenic channelopathies and cardiomyopathies is less clear.
77  new avenues for improved therapy for muscle channelopathies and diseases of the neuromuscular juncti
78 ologic functions of K(+) channels or related channelopathies and for restoring axonal conduction in d
79 as a disease-causing mechanism in the muscle channelopathies and have allowed new correlations to be
80 istics reflecting those of inherited cardiac channelopathies and most likely amount to impaired repol
81 dation for discovery of treatments for NALCN channelopathies and other electrical disorders.
82 ability or trafficking underlies diverse ion channelopathies and represents an unexploited unifying p
83 have been implicated in painful and painless channelopathies and there has been intense interest in t
84 sed in brain, highlighting the importance of channelopathies and transcriptional regulators.
85 n gnomAD, we report an evaluation of cardiac channelopathy and cardiomyopathy genes in a large, demog
86 lecular Autopsy) and surveillance of cardiac channelopathy and cardiomyopathy genes represents the la
87 wever, the mechanistic basis of the chloride channelopathy and its relationship to the development of
88               Our studies identify a type of channelopathy and link the dysfunction of mechanically a
89  Overall, these results establish KPLBS as a channelopathy and suggest that KCNJ6 (GIRK2) could also
90 ession is a novel mechanism that leads to BK channelopathy and vasculopathy in diabetes.
91 tic knockout of Sorbs2 manifests coronary BK channelopathy and vasculopathy observed in diabetic mice
92 ed in AF, the Mendelian cardiomyopathies and channelopathies, and all ion channels within the genome.
93 s in Na+ channels contributes to several ion channelopathies, and gating pore current conducted by mu
94 typic diseases observed in the muscle sodium channelopathies, and, given that homologous residues are
95 s zoster), nerve compression, nerve trauma, "channelopathies," and autoimmune disease are examples of
96                                          Ion channelopathies are a diverse array of human disorders c
97                                              Channelopathies are a diverse set of disorders associate
98                                    Inherited channelopathies are at the origin of many neurological d
99 mechanistic understanding of skeletal muscle channelopathies are being translated into improved thera
100 efects in trafficking and expression, sodium channelopathies are caused by dysfunction in one or seve
101    But with this new information, autoimmune channelopathies are detected and treated with increasing
102                                              Channelopathies are implicated in Fragile X syndrome (FX
103  premature activation underlie certain Na(V) channelopathies are important questions that will requir
104                                          Ion channelopathies are inherited diseases in which alterati
105                      Typically, neurological channelopathies are inherited in an autosomal dominant f
106                Although the vast majority of channelopathies are linked with inherited mutations that
107 function and clinical status associated with channelopathies are not necessarily predictable solely f
108      Improvements in treatment of the muscle channelopathies are on the horizon.
109                                    Human Nav channelopathies are primarily caused by variants that di
110                                  Cardiac ion channelopathies are responsible for an ever-increasing n
111               At present the best understood channelopathies are those that affect muscle-fibre excit
112 l management has been as great as in cardiac channelopathies, arrhythmic disorders of genetic origin
113 s, and is unique in that it incorporates ion channelopathies as a primary cardiomyopathy in consensus
114 nnels leads to complex and poorly understood channelopathies as a result of gain- or loss-of-function
115 ooth muscle organs and have implications for channelopathies as putative aetiologies of smooth muscle
116 indings identify calcium-activated potassium channelopathy as a cause of cortical dysfunction in the
117 pendent Na(+) channel dysregulation in SCN4A channelopathies associated with cold- and K(+)-aggravate
118  that cancer constitutes another category of channelopathies associated with dysregulated channel exp
119          Brugada syndrome (BrS) is a cardiac channelopathy associated with an elevated risk of arrhyt
120 ts were identified in 29 (17%) patients (60% channelopathy-associated and 40% cardiomyopathy-associat
121 approaches for developing in vitro models of channelopathy-associated disorders, the available tools
122                                              Channelopathy-associated enriched terms were identified
123                              In total, among channelopathy-associated genes, there were 9975 variants
124  in SCN9A, the gene encoding Na(V)1.7, cause channelopathy-associated indifference to pain (CIP), whe
125 atform that can be adapted to search for any channelopathy-associated regulatory proteins, these resu
126 reviously unexplored mechanism for human Nav channelopathy based on altered Nav1.5 association with F
127 elopathy) except LQT4, which is a functional channelopathy because of mutations in ankyrin-B.
128       Together, these results show that HCN1 channelopathy begins rapidly and persists after SE, invo
129     We conclude that SE produces an acquired channelopathy by inducing long-term alterations in thala
130  We also investigated the link between Kv1.5 channelopathy, [Ca2+]i, and AF.
131           Multiple voltage-gated Na(+) (Nav) channelopathies can be ascribed to subtle changes in the
132 nt years has shown that genetic neurological channelopathies can cause many different neurological di
133 l cord, peripheral nerve or muscle mean that channelopathies can impact on almost any area of neurolo
134 nts provide additional evidence that calcium channelopathies can produce paroxysmal dyskinesias and p
135 fertility known thus far and that this sperm channelopathy can readily be diagnosed, enabling future
136 em are relatively common and include cardiac channelopathies, cardiomyopathies, aortopathies, hyperch
137 e cardiovascular disease such as cardiac ion channelopathies, cardiomyopathies, thoracic aortic disea
138                                     Neuronal channelopathies cause brain disorders, including epileps
139 es, a striking feature is that many neuronal channelopathies cause paroxysmal symptoms.
140 d KCNN3 in a group of neurological potassium channelopathies caused by an increase in K(+) conductanc
141 Non-dystrophic myotonias are skeletal muscle channelopathies caused by ion channel dysfunction.
142                                   The Ca(2+) channelopathies caused by mutations of the CACNA1A gene
143 s (hypoPP) is the archetypal skeletal muscle channelopathy caused by dysfunction of one of two sarcol
144 s previously considered to be a paracellular channelopathy caused by mutations in the claudin-16 and
145 ave shown that familial erythromelalgia is a channelopathy caused by mutations in the gene encoding t
146         Episodic ataxia type 1 is a neuronal channelopathy caused by mutations in the KCNA1 gene enco
147    Andersen-Tawil syndrome is a neurological channelopathy caused by mutations in the KCNJ2 gene that
148 nel-encoding gene, adds to a growing list of channelopathies causing paroxysmal neurologic disturbanc
149 al dominant central nervous system potassium channelopathy characterized by brief attacks of cerebell
150     Long-QT syndrome is an inherited cardiac channelopathy characterized by delayed repolarization, r
151                            A second class of channelopathies, characterized by autoantibodies against
152                     Our findings support the channelopathy classification of PKD2 variants associated
153 re, our patients appear to suffer from a new channelopathy comprised of ID, seizures and cardiac prob
154                    SeSAME/EAST syndrome is a channelopathy consisting of a hypokalemic, hypomagnesemi
155 es a seizure-induced "transcriptional Ca(2+) channelopathy" consisting of Ca(V)3.2 and alpha2delta4,
156                   The investigation of such 'channelopathies' continues to yield remarkable insights
157 TION: Our results add to the evidence that a channelopathy contributes to cerebellar dysfunction in M
158                                Acquired HCN1 channelopathy derives from NRSF-mediated transcriptional
159          We propose that the novel "acquired channelopathy" described here, namely, PKA-mediated down
160  ciliopathies as well as cohesinopathies and channelopathies, discuss possibilities for the functiona
161 e has been a parallel advance in research on channelopathies (diseases resulting from impaired channe
162 absence epilepsy caused by a P/Q-type Ca(2+) channelopathy due to a missense mutation in the Cacna1a
163                                 As with most channelopathies, episodic attacks in ATS are frequently
164 nce that an 'overlap' exists among inherited channelopathies, especially those involving the sodium a
165  This first report of Kv1.5 loss-of-function channelopathy establishes KCNA5 mutation as a novel risk
166 ent primary cardiac channel defects (ie, ion channelopathy) except LQT4, which is a functional channe
167 likely exist for other genotypically diverse channelopathies, expanding the therapeutic landscape for
168 e main features of the most common inherited channelopathies, focusing on the findings that advanced
169 hypothesis was that deleterious mutations in channelopathy genes may have a functional effect in uter
170 hypothesis was that deleterious mutations in channelopathy genes may have a functional effect in uter
171 s) without disease-causative variants in the channelopathy genes, and 973 ostensibly healthy controls
172 s) without disease-causative variants in the channelopathy genes, and 973 ostensibly healthy controls
173 current deleterious variation of FBN2, MYH6, channelopathy genes, and type 1 and 5 collagen genes.
174 l encode ion channels and are referred to as channelopathy genes.
175  the molecular pathogenesis of muscle sodium channelopathies has been revealed by the finding of 'lea
176            However, a new class of human Nav channelopathies has emerged based on channel variants th
177        Dissecting the pathogenesis of these 'channelopathies' has yielded important insights into the
178  growing number of gain-of-function (GOF) BK channelopathies have been identified in patients with ep
179    Recent discoveries in the skeletal muscle channelopathies have increased our understanding of the
180        However, a cluster of severe Ca(V)2.1 channelopathies have overlapping presentations which sug
181 e cardiac conditions, including arrhythmias (channelopathies), heart failure (cardiomyopathies), lipi
182 city is critical in the diagnosis of cardiac channelopathies; however, it remains unknown how variant
183 rs, previously identified cell type-specific channelopathies in a mouse of model of Fragile X syndrom
184  kcne3 are linked to congenital and acquired channelopathies in Homo sapiens.
185                                      Calcium channelopathies in the central nervous system provide a
186 oduces a mutant vascular phenotype akin to a channelopathy in a genetic model of SVD.
187  a molecular substrate for stress-associated channelopathy in cardiovascular disease.
188 yR), cause the startle disease/hyperekplexia channelopathy in man.
189 large-animal model of a human cardiac sodium channelopathy in pigs, which have cardiac structure and
190 ed as a modifier of the severity of a sodium channelopathy in the mouse.
191                       Thus, the severe ClC-1 channelopathy in young HSA(LR) animals is slowly reverse
192 ion of these processes underlies diverse ion channelopathies including cardiac arrhythmias and cystic
193 s, potentially shedding light on other Orai1 channelopathies, including anhidrosis (an inability to s
194 -function mutations in Na(v)1.5 cause sodium channelopathies, including Brugada syndrome, dilated car
195  specific channels underlie a diverse set of channelopathies, including cardiac arrhythmias and epile
196 illoid 4) cause diverse and largely distinct channelopathies, including inherited forms of neuromuscu
197 hannel, are causative of a variety of muscle channelopathies, including non-dystrophic myotonias and
198 ocopies many aspects of human cardiac sodium channelopathy, including conduction slowing and increase
199                   Animal models of monogenic channelopathies increasingly help our understanding.
200 se a novel hypothesis of respiratory neurone channelopathy induced by carotid body overactivity in ne
201 nels in the generation of neuronal activity, channelopathies involving sodium channels might be expec
202                               The concept of channelopathies is not restricted to genetic disorders;
203                  Genetic testing for cardiac channelopathies is the standard of care.
204                 One particularly devastating channelopathy is Dravet syndrome (DS), a severe childhoo
205                                Such acquired channelopathy is likely to amplify neuronal activity and
206                           The list of these "channelopathies" is expanding rapidly, as is the phenoty
207                       The list of confirmed 'channelopathies' is growing and several members of the T
208 c (e.g., inherited gain-of-function mutation channelopathies, ischemia, and chronic and vagally media
209 chondrial mATP6/8 genes, have been linked to channelopathy-like episodic weakness.
210                 Our results suggest that ion channelopathies may be involved in the pathogenesis of b
211                              Acquired sodium channelopathy may be the mechanism underlying acute neur
212 en demyelinated, suggesting that an acquired channelopathy may contribute to the pathophysiology of d
213 s that episodic ataxia type 2, a P/Q calcium channelopathy, may be phenotypically modulated by endocr
214 nt death syndrome (SIDS) cases may stem from channelopathy-mediated lethal arrhythmias.
215                       The human TRPV4(V620I) channelopathy mutation was transfected into primary porc
216 as to determine the mechanism by which TRPV4 channelopathy mutations cause skeletal dysplasia.
217 included congenital heart diseases (n = 17), channelopathies (n = 14), cardiomyopathies (n = 15), non
218  JCI, McClenaghan et al. explored one of the channelopathies, namely Cantu syndrome (CS), which is a
219 ic cardiomyopathy, and most probably genetic channelopathies, NSVT carries prognostic significance, w
220 ions indicate that the myotonia and chloride channelopathy observed in DM both result from abnormal a
221                                              Channelopathies of autoimmune origin are novel and are a
222 nign familial neonatal convulsions and other channelopathies of skeletal and cardiac muscle, includin
223  of voltage-gated ion channels cause several channelopathies of skeletal muscle, which present clinic
224 on, neuronal function and clinical status in channelopathies of the nervous system?
225                                 However, the channelopathy of CACNA1I in schizophrenia is unknown.
226 ing mechanisms of ion permeation, gating and channelopathy of cyclic-nucleotide-gated channels and cy
227  model stem from a gain-of-function chloride channelopathy of glial cells.
228 alemic periodic paralysis (HypoPP) is an ion channelopathy of skeletal muscle characterized by attack
229 To determine the effects of a human connexin channelopathy on cardiac electrophysiology and arrhythmo
230 altered BK channel expression is an acquired channelopathy or a compensatory mechanism affecting the
231                                 In diagnosed channelopathy or arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardio
232         These observations have cemented the channelopathy paradigm, in which episodic disorders are
233 clarified the role of gating pore current in channelopathy pathogenesis.
234                                          Ion channelopathy plays an important role in human epilepsy
235 e unaffected in many paroxysmal neurological channelopathies, possibly explained by homoeostatic plas
236                                        These channelopathies produce a range of disorders which inclu
237 function raise important questions about how channelopathies produce disease.
238       Recognizing the fundamental defects in channelopathies provides the basis for new strategies of
239  based on the diverse roles of ion channels, channelopathies range from inherited cardiac arrhythmias
240                                    The term 'channelopathy' refers to human genetic disorders caused
241                                        Brain channelopathies represent a growing class of brain disor
242                                Several human channelopathies result from mutations in alpha1A, the po
243 bute to Brugada Syndrome (BrS), an inherited channelopathy resulting from genetic-determined loss-of-
244                                 We term this channelopathy resulting from loss-of-function of SUR2-co
245                        A survey of other ion channelopathies reveals numerous examples of mutations t
246                           In several cardiac channelopathies, sex-specific predictors of outcome have
247                                              Channelopathies (short and long QT, Brugada, and catecho
248     The discovery of these and other calcium channelopathies should help to clarify how different mut
249                                 The neuronal channelopathies show evidence of phenotypic convergence;
250 to a seizure-induced "transcriptional Ca(2+) channelopathy."SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The onset of focal
251 uring the past 2 years, a new chapter in the channelopathy story has been opened with the identificat
252 s treatments to prevent CFAs associated with channelopathies such as ATS.
253 ant death syndrome, can be caused by cardiac channelopathies such as Brugada syndrome (BrS).
254                                      Cardiac channelopathies such as catecholaminergic polymorphic ta
255  ion channel replacement therapy in treating channelopathies such as cystic fibrosis (CF).
256  efficacy in channel replacement therapy for channelopathies such as cystic fibrosis.
257 LCA1 VWA domain in loss-of-function chloride channelopathies such as cystic fibrosis.
258 id the development of compounds for treating channelopathies such as cystic fibrosis.
259 logical activity, including the treatment of channelopathies such as cystic fibrosis.
260 e study and potential treatment of potassium channelopathies such as epilepsy, Parkinson's disease an
261 hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) or cardiac channelopathies such as long-QT syndrome (LQTS); however
262 ogenetic mechanism for genetically inherited channelopathies, such as benign familial neonatal seizur
263  KCNQ1 or KCNE subunits can cause congenital channelopathies, such as deafness, cardiac arrhythmias a
264 ed postmortem genetic testing of the 4 major channelopathy-susceptibility genes (KCNQ1, KCNH2, SCN5A,
265 specificity, genetic heterogeneity underlies channelopathies that are suspected chiefly because of a
266 e insight into the mechanisms of a number of channelopathies that coexist with, and may contribute to
267 mary episodic ataxias are autosomal dominant channelopathies that manifest as attacks of imbalance an
268 ardiomyopathies that cause heart failure and channelopathies that underlie cardiac arrhythmias, have
269                                              Channelopathies that underlie monogenic human pain syndr
270 drome (LQTS) is a potentially lethal cardiac channelopathy that can be mistaken for palpitations, neu
271 chycardia (CPVT) is a stress-induced cardiac channelopathy that has a high mortality in untreated pat
272                     Here we report a form of channelopathy that is acquired in experimental temporal
273  cause a unique disease syndrome called CRAC channelopathy that is characterized by immunodeficiency
274 ne models of CNGB3 achromatopsia, a neuronal channelopathy that is the most common form of achromatop
275 utism, at least partially, by inducing an Ih channelopathy that may be amenable to pharmacological in
276                      CNGB3 mutations cause a channelopathy that results in impaired cone function man
277    Brugada syndrome is a potentially serious channelopathy that usually presents in adulthood and has
278 eagues present a pig model of cardiac sodium channelopathy that was generated by introducing a human
279                            In all autoimmune channelopathies, the relationship between autoantibody s
280 ver, in many cases, and especially in sodium channelopathies, the results from genomic sequencing can
281                           At odds with other channelopathies, the role of nonmodifiable risk factors
282 e post-mortem molecular diagnosis of cardiac channelopathies through the use of a molecular autopsy h
283                           Insights into such channelopathies thus provide us with a number of potenti
284 knock-in mouse model carrying human BK-D434G channelopathy to investigate the neuronal mechanism of B
285 inopathy has pleiotropic presentations, from channelopathy to syndromic forms.
286                 Our findings suggest that BK channelopathy underlies epilepsy in AS and support the u
287 ngs have recently been made in the field of "channelopathies." Understanding these diseases on the mo
288           In 1995, the discipline of cardiac channelopathies was born with the revelation that mutati
289 ated that an autoantibody-mediated potassium channelopathy was likely to be the cause of their disord
290                                              Channelopathy was the most frequent late diagnosis not m
291                                   The sodium channelopathies were among the first recognized ion chan
292 , negative for ischemia, cardiomyopathy, and channelopathy) were reviewed.
293       Kir6.x or SUR mutations result in KATP channelopathies, which reflect the physiological roles o
294 T syndrome (LQTS) is the most common cardiac channelopathy with 15 elucidated LQTS-susceptibility gen
295 drome (LQTS) is a potentially lethal cardiac channelopathy with a 1% to 5% annual risk of LQTS-trigge
296 c ventricular tachycardia (CPVT1), a cardiac channelopathy with increased propensity for lethal ventr
297      Andersen-Tawil syndrome (ATS) is an ion channelopathy with variable penetrance for the triad of
298 editary long QT syndrome (LQTS) is a genetic channelopathy with variable penetrance that is associate
299  clinical features of the known neurological channelopathies, within the context of the functions of
300                            A Clinical Domain Channelopathy Working Group provided a final classificat

 
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