4.7 Article

A KCNE2 mutation in a patient with cardiac arrhythmia induced by auditory stimuli and serum electrolyte imbalance

Journal

CARDIOVASCULAR RESEARCH
Volume 77, Issue 1, Pages 98-106

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/cvr/cvm030

Keywords

MiRP1; KCNE2; hERG; KCNH2; potassium channel; long QT syndrome

Funding

  1. NATIONAL HEART, LUNG, AND BLOOD INSTITUTE [R01HL079275] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER
  2. NHLBI NIH HHS [R01 HL079275] Funding Source: Medline

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Aims Auditory stimulus-induced long QT syndrome (LQTS) is almost exclusively linked to mutations in the hERG potassium channel, which generates the I-Kr ventricular repolarization current. Here, a young woman with prior episodes of auditory stimulus-induced syncope presented with LQTS and ventricular fibrillation (VF) with hypomagnesaemia and hypocalcaemia after completing a marathon, followed by subsequent VF with hypokalaemia. The patient was found to harbour a KCNE2 gene mutation encoding a T10M amino acid substitution in MiRP1, an ancillary subunit that co-assembles with and functionally modulates hERG. Other family members with the mutation were asymptomatic, and the proband had no mutations in hERG or other LQTS-linked cardiac ion channel genes. The T10M mutation was absent from 578 unrelated, ethnically matched control chromosomes analysed here and was previously described only once-in an LQTS patient-but not functionally characterized. Methods and results T10M-MiRP1-hERG currents were assessed using whole-cell voltage clamp of transfected Chinese Hamster ovary cells. T10M-MiRP1-hERG channels showed <= 80% reduced tail current, left-shifted steady-state inactivation, and 50% slower recovery from inactivation when compared with wild-type channels, with mixed wild-type/T10M channels displaying an intermediate phenotype. Lowering bath K+ concentration reduced wild-type and T10M currents equivalently. Conclusion Data suggest a mechanism for reduced penetrance, inherited arrhythmia in which baseline I-Kr current reduction by the T10M mutation is exacerbated by superimposition of arrhythmogenic substrates such as auditory stimuli, or electrolyte disturbances that reduce I-Kr (hypokalaemia) or otherwise lower the ventricular threshold for fibrillation (hypomagnesaemia and hypocalcaemia). This first example of a MiRP1 mutation associated with auditory stimulus-induced arrhythmia is supportive of the hypothesis that MiRP1 regulates hERG in the human heart.

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