Literature DB >> 29983085

Mexiletine rescues a mixed biophysical phenotype of the cardiac sodium channel arising from the SCN5A mutation, N406K, found in LQT3 patients.

Rou-Mu Hu1,2, David J Tester3, Ryan Li4, Tianyu Sun4, Blaise Z Peterson4, Michael J Ackerman3, Jonathan C Makielski2, Bi-Hua Tan2,4.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Individual mutations in the SCN5A-encoding cardiac sodium channel α-subunit usually cause a single cardiac arrhythmia disorder, some cause mixed biophysical or clinical phenotypes. Here we report an infant, female patient harboring a N406K mutation in SCN5A with a marked and mixed biophysical phenotype and assess pathogenic mechanisms. METHODS AND
RESULTS: A patient suffered from recurrent seizures during sleep and torsades de pointes with a QTc of 530 ms. Mutational analysis identified a N406K mutation in SCN5A. The mutation was engineered by site-directed mutagenesis and heterologously expressed in HEK293 cells. After 48 hours incubation with and without mexiletine, macroscopic voltage-gated sodium current (INa) was measured with standard whole-cell patch clamp techniques. SCN5A-N406K elicited both a significantly decreased peak INa and a significantly increased late INa compared to wide-type (WT) channels. Furthermore, mexiletine both restored the decreased peak INa of the mutant channel and inhibited the increased late INa of the mutant channel.
CONCLUSION: SCN5A-N406K channel displays both "gain-of-function" in late INa and "loss-of-function" in peak INa density contributing to a mixed biophysical phenotype. Moreover, our finding may provide the first example that mexiletine exerts a dual rescue of both "gain-of-function" and "loss-of-function" of the mutant sodium channel.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Mexiletine; SCN5A; mixed phenotype; mutation; sodium channel

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29983085      PMCID: PMC6104686          DOI: 10.1080/19336950.2018.1475794

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Channels (Austin)        ISSN: 1933-6950            Impact factor:   2.581


  36 in total

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Review 2.  Electrophysiological basis and genetics of Brugada syndrome.

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Authors:  Carmen R Valdivia; Michael J Ackerman; David J Tester; Tomoyuki Wada; Jorge McCormack; Bin Ye; Jonathan C Makielski
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Review 5.  Inhibition of late sodium current by mexiletine: a novel pharmotherapeutical approach in timothy syndrome.

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6.  A ubiquitous splice variant and a common polymorphism affect heterologous expression of recombinant human SCN5A heart sodium channels.

Authors:  Jonathan C Makielski; Bin Ye; Carmen R Valdivia; Matthew D Pagel; Jielin Pu; David J Tester; Michael J Ackerman
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7.  Sodium channel β1 subunit mutations associated with Brugada syndrome and cardiac conduction disease in humans.

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Authors:  Cecile Terrenoire; Kai Wang; Kelvin W Chan Tung; Wendy K Chung; Robert H Pass; Jonathan T Lu; Jyh-Chang Jean; Amel Omari; Kevin J Sampson; Darrell N Kotton; Gordon Keller; Robert S Kass
Journal:  J Gen Physiol       Date:  2013-01       Impact factor: 4.086

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Authors:  Adrien Moreau; Dagmar I Keller; Hai Huang; Véronique Fressart; Christian Schmied; Quadiri Timour; Mohamed Chahine
Journal:  Front Pharmacol       Date:  2012-04-20       Impact factor: 5.810

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4.  Expression defect of the rare variant/Brugada mutation R1512W depends upon the SCN5A splice variant background and can be rescued by mexiletine and the common polymorphism H558R.

Authors:  Rou-Mu Hu; Evelyn J Song; David J Tester; Isabelle Deschenes; Michael J Ackerman; Jonathan C Makielski; Bi-Hua Tan
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