| Literature DB >> 31653119 |
Vera Paar1, Peter Jirak2, Robert Larbig3, Naufal Shamilevich Zagidullin4, Mathias C Brandt5, Michael Lichtenauer6, Uta C Hoppe7, Lukas J Motloch8.
Abstract
Cardiac arrhythmias constitute a major health problem with a huge impact on mortality rates and health care costs. Despite ongoing research efforts, the understanding of the molecular mechanisms and processes responsible for arrhythmogenesis remains incomplete. Given the crucial role of Ca2+-handling in action potential generation and cardiac contraction, Ca2+ channels and Ca2+ handling proteins represent promising targets for suppression of ventricular arrhythmias. Accordingly, we report the different roles of Ca2+-handling in the development of congenital as well as acquired ventricular arrhythmia syndromes. We highlight the therapeutic potential of gene therapy as a novel and innovative approach for future arrhythmia therapy. Furthermore, we discuss various promising cellular and mitochondrial targets for therapeutic gene transfer currently under investigation.Entities:
Keywords: L-type calcium channel; calcium; gene therapy; genetic mutations; heart failure; ion channels; mitochondria; ryanodine receptor; sarcoplasmic Ca2+-ATPase; ventricular arrhythmias
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31653119 PMCID: PMC6862059 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20215304
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Calcium handling in cardiomyocytes illustrating the most important calcium-related organelles and channels. Disturbed ion channel functions or calcium mishandling results in an increased cytosolic calcium concentration. This further promotes the generation of early and delayed afterdepolarizations, leading to Ca2+-induced ventricular tachycardia. Ca2+: calcium; ICa: calcium current; MCU: mitochondrial calcium uniporter; MF: myofilament; NCLX: mitochondrial potassium-calcium exchanger; NCX: sodium-calcium exchanger; RyR2: ryanodine receptor type 2; VES: ventricular extrasystoles; VT: ventricular tachycardia.
Advantages and limitations of different gene delivery vectors and CRISPR/Cas9 system.
| Method | Advantages | Limitations | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lentivirus | Broad host range | No specific tropism for CMs | [ |
| AD | Broad host range | Short-term expression | [ |
| AAV | Relatively broad host range | Difficulties in high transgene expression | [ |
| CRISPR/Cas9 | Targeting specific DNA sequences | Difficulties in off-target effects (nonspecific and mismatched genetic modifications) | [ |
AD: adenovirus; AAV: adeno-associated virus; CRISPR/Cas9: clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats with caspase 9; CMs: cardiomyocytes; DNA: deoxyribonucleic acid; kb: kilobases; NAbs: neutralizing antibodies.
Gene therapies for ventricular tachycardia targeting L-type Ca2+ channel (LTCC).
| Author (year) | Vector | Delivery Technique | Genetic Information | Species/Model | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Murata et al. (2004) [ | AD | Injection into LV cavity | Mutant Ras-related G-protein Gem W296G | Guinea pig/wt | ↓ ICa-L in CMs |
| Cingolani et al. (2007) [ | Lentivirus | Injection into LV cavity | Hairpin RNA for β2 | Rat/aortic-banded model of LV hypertrophy | ↓ ICa-L in CMs |
| Subramanyam et al. (2013) [ | AD | In vitro | Split-intein-tagged α1C-fragments | Rat/wt | ↑ Ca2+ transients |
The origin of the genetic material used in the studies is indicated, if mentioned in the publication. Injection into the aortic root or the left ventricle (LV) cavity was performed during transient cross-clamping of the great vessels. Intramyocardial injection was performed after thoracotomy. ↓: decrease; ↑: support; AD: adenovirus; Ca2+: calcium; CMs: cardiomyocytes; ICa-L: L-type calcium current; LV: left ventricle; RNA: ribonucleic acid; VM: ventricular myocard; wt: wild-type.
Gene therapies to restore cardiac electrophysiology and to prevent ventricular tachyarrhythmias targeting sarco/endo plasmic reticulum calcium ATPase (SERCA2a).
| Author (year) | Vector | Delivery Technique | Species/Model | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Giordano et al. (1997) [ | AD | In vitro | Rat— | ↑ SERCA2a expression |
| Hajjar et al. (1997) [ | AD | In vitro | Rat— | ↑ peak Ca2+ release |
| Terracciano et al. (2002) [ | AD | In vitro | Rabbit— | ↓ APD |
| del Monte et al. (2004) [ | AD | Intramyocardial injection | Rat— | ↓ VT after I/R |
| Prunier et al. (2008) [ | AD | Anterograde coronary injection | Swine— | ↓ VT after I/R |
| Cutler et al. (2009) [ | AD | Injection into aortic root | Guinea pig— | ↓ APD alternans in vitro and ex vivo |
| Lyon et al. (2011) [ | AD | Intramyocardial (AV), | Rat— | ↓ VT ex vivo |
| Cutler et al. (2012) [ | AAV9 | Injection into aortic root | Guinea pig— | ↓ APD alternans |
| Motloch et al. (2018) [ | AAV1 | Intracoronary injection | Swine— | ↓ QRS duration in vivo |
| Strauss et al. (2019) [ | AAV1 | Aerosolized | Rat— | ↓ VT in vivo |
The origin of the genetic material used in the studies is indicated, if indicated in the publication. Injection into the aortic root or the LV cavity was performed during transient cross-clamping of the great vessels. Intramyocardial injection was performed after thoracotomy. ↓: decrease; ↑: improvement; AD: adenovirus; AAV1: adenovirus-associated virus serotype 1; AAV9: AAV serotype 9; APD: action potential duration; EF: ejection fraction; HF: heart failure; I/R: ischemia reperfusion; LV: left ventricle; MI: myocardial infarction; PAH: pulmonary arterial hypertension; SERCA2a: sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ ATPase 2a; UV: upstroke velocity; VT: ventricular tachycardia; wt: wild-type.
Gene therapies for ventricular tachycardia targeting ryanodine receptor 2 (RyR2) and genes of RyR2-mediating proteins.
| Author (year) | Vector | Delivery Technique | Genetic Information | Species/Model | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bongianino et al. (2017) [ | AAV9 | Intraperitoneal injection | miRyR2-U10 | Mouse/wt | ↓ DADs |
| Pan et al. (2018) [ | AAV9 | Subcutaneous injection | RyR2 | Mouse/CPVT (R176Q/+) | ↓ arrhythmias in vivo |
| Denegri et al. (2014) [ | AAV9 | Intraperitoneal injection | CASQ2 | Mouse/CPVT (R33Q) | ↓ VT in vivo |
| Lodola et al. (2016) [ | AAV9 | In vitro | CASQ2 | Human/CPVT; iPSCs (CASQ2-G112+5X) | ↓ DADs |
| Kurtzwald-Josefson et al. (2017) [ | AAV9 | Intraperitoneal injection | CASQ2 | Mouse/CPVT (CASQ2D307H or CASQ2Δ/Δ) | ↓ VT in vivo |
| Liu et al. (2018) [ | AAV9 | Intra-thoracic cavity injection | CaM | Mouse/CPVT (R33Q) | ↑ Ca2+ handling |
| Bezzerides et al. (2019) [ | AAV9 | Subcutaneous injection | CaMKII | Mouse/ | ↓ ventricular arrhythmia in vivo |
The origin of the genetic material used in the studies is indicated, if indicated in the publication. Injection into the aortic root or the LV cavity was performed during transient cross-clamping of the great vessels. Intramyocardial injection was performed after thoracotomy. ↓: decrease; ↑: improvement; AAV9: adeno-associated virus serotype 9; Ca2+: calcium; CaM: calmodulin; CaMKII: calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II; CASQ2: calsequestrin 2; CPVT: catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia; DADs: delayed afterdepolarizations; hiPSCs: human induced pluripotent stem cells; RyR2: ryanodine receptor type 2; VT: ventricular tachycardia; wt: wild-type.
Downregulation or overexpression of cardiac Na+/Ca2+ exchanger (NCX).
| Author (year) | Vector | Delivery Technique | Species/Model | Expression Properties | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schillinger et al. (2000) [ | AD | In vitro | Rabbit/wt | OE | ↓ contractile function |
| Terracciano et al. (2001) [ | Transfection reagent | In vitro | Mouse/wt | OE | ↑ Ca2+ handling and homeostasis |
| Ranu et al. (2002) [ | AD | In vitro | Rabbit/wt | OE | ↓ contraction amplitude |
| Tadros et al. (2002) [ | AD | In vitro | Rat/MI | DR | ↓ Ca2+ influx and efflux |
| Schillinger et al. (2003) [ | AD | In vitro | Rabbit/wt | OE | Systolic and diastolic dysfunction |
| Bölck et al. (2004) [ | AD | In vitro | Rat/wt | OE | ↓ cell shortening at higher stimulation frequencies |
The origin of the genetic material used in the studies is indicated, if indicated in the publication. Injection into the aortic root or the LV cavity was performed during transient cross-clamping of the great vessels. Intramyocardial injection was performed after thoracotomy. ↓: decrease; ↑: improvement; AD: adenovirus; Ca2+: calcium; OE: overexpression; DR: downregulation; wt: wild-type.
Gene therapies for HF and inherited cardiac diseases targeting mitochondrial proteins, such as mitochondrial calcium uniporter (MCU), mitochondrial uncoupling protein 2 (UCP2) and mitochondrial N+/Ca2+ exchanger (NCLX).
| Author (year) | Vector | Delivery Technique | Genetic Information | Species/Model | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wu et al. (2015) [ | AD | In vitro, Mouse embryonic stem cells | DN-MCU | Mouse/wt | MCU is necessary for physiological heart rate acceleration |
| Oropeza-Almazán et al. (2017) [ | Transfection reagent | In vitro | siRNA targeting MCU | Rat/H/R injury | ↓ mitochondrial permeability pore opening |
| Suarez et al. (2018) [ | AAV9 | Direct jugular vein injection | MCU | Mouse/Diabetic | Restoration of cardiac myocyte and heart function |
| Larbig et al. (2017) [ | Knock-out model | UCP2-/- | Mouse/Knock-out | ↓ ICa-L in CM | |
| Luongo et al. (2017) [ | Knock-out and OE model | Mouse/Knock-out and OE | ↑ | ||
The origin of the genetic material used in the studies is indicated, if indicated in the publication. Injection into the aortic root or the LV cavity was performed during transient cross-clamping of the great vessels. Intramyocardial injection was performed after thoracotomy. ↓: decrease; ↑: improvement; AD: adenovirus; AAV9: adeno-associated virus serotype 9; ATP: adenosine triphosphate; Ca2+: calcium; CM: cardiomyocyte; DN: dominant-negative; H/R: hypoxia/reoxygenation; MCU: mitochondrial calcium uniporter; OE: overexpression; siRNA: small interfering ribonucleic acid; VT: ventricular tachycardia; wt: wild-type.