This report describes developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 2 (DEE2); DEE2 exhibits X-linked dominant inheritance. The human gene implicated in this disease is CDKL5, which encodes a serine/threonine protein kinase. There is a single orthologous gene in Drosophila, Dmel\Cdkl, for which multiple genetic reagents have been generated. The fly gene is the single ortholog of 5 paralogous genes in human.
Loss of Drosophila Cdkl causes a semi-lethal phenotype in pupae, killing 90% of the animals just prior to eclosion. The mutant flies that survive show climbing defects, heat-induced seizures, reduced longevity, and hearing loss. Dmel\Cdkl is expressed primarily in the peripheral nervous system.
A UAS construct of the human Hsap\CDKL5 gene has been introduced into flies; heterologous rescue (functional complementation) has been demonstrated. The redundancy of the CDKL system in vertebrates complicates investigations into disease-implicated genetic variants. It is proposed that Drosophila Cdkl provides a relevant DEE2 model for variants affecting the kinase domain, but not for those affecting the C-terminal tail.
[updated Aug. 2025 by FlyBase; FBrf0222196]
[DEVELOPMENTAL AND EPILEPTIC ENCEPHALOPATHY 2; DEE2](https://omim.org/entry/300672)
[CYCLIN-DEPENDENT KINASE-LIKE 5; CDKL5](https://omim.org/entry/300203)
Developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 2 (DEE2) is an X-linked dominant severe neurologic disorder characterized by onset of seizures in the first months of life and severe global developmental delay resulting in impaired intellectual development and poor motor control. Other features include lack of speech development, subtle dysmorphic facial features, sleep disturbances, gastrointestinal problems, and stereotypic hand movements. [from MIM:300672; 2025.08.26]
Developmental and epileptic encephalopathy 2 (DEE2) is caused by mutation in the CDKL5 gene. [from MIM:300672; 2025.08.26]
CDKL5 encodes a serine/threonine protein kinase. [GeneCards, CDKL5; 2025.08.26]
The CDKL kinase domain is conserved across all eukaryotic species; a long C-terminal region present in CDKL5 is specific to vertebrates (Martin-Carrascosa, et al., 2025; pubmed:40371392; FBrf0262381).
Many to one: 5 human genes to 1 Drosophila gene.
High-scoring ortholog of human CDKL1 and CDKL4; lower-scoring ortholog of human CDKL2, CDKL3, and CDKL5 (1 Drosophila to 5 human).