High-throughput compound screening of Kv7.2/7.3 using the Automated Patch Clamp platform Qube 384
Journal
KCNQ2 Cure Family & Professional Summit
Author(s)
Year
2025
The heteromeric potassium channel KCNQ2 (KV7.2)/KCNQ3 (KV7.3) contributes to the subthreshold M-current in many neurons, helping regulate excitability and stabilize the membrane potential near rest. Upon hKV7.2/7.3 channel opening, the excitability of neurons is decreased. Loss-of-function mutations have been found to underlie a spectrum of neurological diseases such as neonatal-onset epilepsy, and epileptic encephalopathy (Biervert et al., 1998; Jentsch, 2000; Maljevic et al., 2008; Weckhuysen et al., 2012; Kato et al., 2013), which makes the channel an interesting drug target.
In 2011, the hKV7.2/7.3 channel opener retigabine was approved as an antiepileptic drug. Due to its adverse effects and lack of specificity, like activation of the hKV7.4 channel, it was withdrawn from the market. However, retigabine validated opening of the hKV7.2/7.3 channel as an antiepileptic strategy and thereby further put a spotlight on the development of drugs aiming at this channel.