4.7 Article

Functional Characterization of Two Novel Mutations in SCN5A Associated with Brugada Syndrome Identified in Italian Patients

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22126513

Keywords

Brugada syndrome; SCN5A; electrophysiology; Na+ current

Funding

  1. PRIN 2017
  2. University of Bari Aldo Moro, Fondi Ateneo 2017-2018

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This study presents the clinical findings of two Italian families with Brugada syndrome and characterizes two novel SCN5A mutations. The Pro1310Leu mutation resulted in reduced sodium current density while the Gly1687_Ile1688insGlyArg mutation led to nearly undetectable sodium current, which could be partially restored with mexiletine incubation. These findings suggest a genotype-phenotype correlation that may guide therapeutic interventions.
Background. Brugada syndrome (BrS) is an autosomal dominantly inherited cardiac disease characterized by coved type ST-segment elevation in the right precordial leads, high susceptibility to ventricular arrhythmia and a family history of sudden cardiac death. The SCN5A gene, encoding for the cardiac voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.5, accounts for similar to 20-30% of BrS cases and is considered clinically relevant. Methods. Here, we describe the clinical findings of two Italian families affected by BrS and provide the functional characterization of two novel SCN5A mutations, the missense variant Pro1310Leu and the in-frame insertion Gly1687_Ile1688insGlyArg. Results. Despite being clinically different, both patients have a family history of sudden cardiac death and had history of arrhythmic events. The Pro1310Leu mutation significantly reduced peak sodium current density without affecting channel membrane localization. Changes in the gating properties of expressed Pro1310Leu channel likely account for the loss-of-function phenotype. On the other hand, Gly1687_Ile1688insGlyArg channel, identified in a female patient, yielded a nearly undetectable sodium current. Following mexiletine incubation, the Gly1687_Ile1688insGlyArg channel showed detectable, albeit very small, currents and biophysical properties similar to those of the Nav1.5 wild-type channel. Conclusions. Overall, our results suggest that the degree of loss-of-function shown by the two Nav1.5 mutant channels correlates with the aggressive clinical phenotype of the two probands. This genotype-phenotype correlation is fundamental to set out appropriate therapeutical intervention.

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