Multiple Mechanisms of Na <sup>+</sup> Channel– Linked Long-QT Syndrome

Robert Dumaine(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Qing Wang(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Mark T. Keating(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Hali A. Hartmann(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Peter J. Schwartz(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Arthur Brown(Howard Hughes Medical Institute), Glenn E. Kirsch(Howard Hughes Medical Institute)
Circulation Research
May 1, 1996
Cited by 345

Abstract

Inheritable long-QT syndrome (LQTS) is a disease in which delayed ventricular repolarization leads to cardiac arrhythmias and the possibility of sudden death. In the chromosome 3-linked disease, one mutation of the cardiac Na+ channel gene results in a deletion of residues 1505 to 1507 (Delta KPQ), and two mutation result in substitutions (N1325S and R1644H). We compared all three mutant-channel phenotypes by heterologous expression in Xenopus oocytes. Each produced a late phase of inactivation-resistant, mexiletine- and tetrodotoxin-sensitive whole-cell currents, but the underlying mechanisms were different at the single-channel level. N1325S and R1644H showed dispersed reopenings after the initial transient, whereas Delta KPQ showed both dispersed reopenings and long-lasting bursts. Thus, two distinct biophysical defects underlie the in vitro phenotype of persistent current in Na+ channel-linked LQTS, and the additive effects of both are responsible for making the Delta KPQ phenotype the most severe.


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