BACKGROUND: Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common cardiac rhythm disorder with a lifetime risk for development of 25% for people aged 40 or older. In this study we aim for the functional assessment of a mutation in KCNE3 identified in a proband with early-onset lone AF. METHODS: Screening of genomic DNA from the proband led to identification of a KCNE3 V17M missense mutation. We heterologously expressed the accessory channel subunit in Xenopus laevis oocytes together with its known interacting potassium channel alpha-subunits. Further, we applied RT-PCR on human total RNA from left and right atria and ventricle. RESULTS: Electrophysiological recordings revealed an increased activity of Kv4.3/KCNE3 and Kv11.1/KCNE3 generated currents by the mutation, thereby conferring susceptibility of mutation carriers to faster cardiac action potential repolarization and thus vulnerability to re-entrant wavelets in the atria and thereby AF. CONCLUSION: Here we report a novel mutation in KCNE3 identified in a proband with early-onset lone AF possibly leading to gain-of-function of several cardiac currents. We suggest abnormalities in the KCNE3 gene as a potential genetic risk factor for initiation and/or maintenance of AF.
BACKGROUND:Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common cardiac rhythm disorder with a lifetime risk for development of 25% for people aged 40 or older. In this study we aim for the functional assessment of a mutation in KCNE3 identified in a proband with early-onset lone AF. METHODS: Screening of genomic DNA from the proband led to identification of a KCNE3V17M missense mutation. We heterologously expressed the accessory channel subunit in Xenopus laevis oocytes together with its known interacting potassium channel alpha-subunits. Further, we applied RT-PCR on human total RNA from left and right atria and ventricle. RESULTS: Electrophysiological recordings revealed an increased activity of Kv4.3/KCNE3 and Kv11.1/KCNE3 generated currents by the mutation, thereby conferring susceptibility of mutation carriers to faster cardiac action potential repolarization and thus vulnerability to re-entrant wavelets in the atria and thereby AF. CONCLUSION: Here we report a novel mutation in KCNE3 identified in a proband with early-onset lone AF possibly leading to gain-of-function of several cardiac currents. We suggest abnormalities in the KCNE3 gene as a potential genetic risk factor for initiation and/or maintenance of AF.
Authors: Emelia J Benjamin; Peng-Sheng Chen; Diane E Bild; Alice M Mascette; Christine M Albert; Alvaro Alonso; Hugh Calkins; Stuart J Connolly; Anne B Curtis; Dawood Darbar; Patrick T Ellinor; Alan S Go; Nora F Goldschlager; Susan R Heckbert; José Jalife; Charles R Kerr; Daniel Levy; Donald M Lloyd-Jones; Barry M Massie; Stanley Nattel; Jeffrey E Olgin; Douglas L Packer; Sunny S Po; Teresa S M Tsang; David R Van Wagoner; Albert L Waldo; D George Wyse Journal: Circulation Date: 2009-02-03 Impact factor: 29.690
Authors: Carlos G Vanoye; Richard C Welch; Melissa A Daniels; Lauren J Manderfield; Andrew R Tapper; Charles R Sanders; Alfred L George Journal: J Gen Physiol Date: 2009-08-17 Impact factor: 4.086