Publication | Closed Access
Multiple Mechanisms of Na <sup>+</sup> Channel– Linked Long-QT Syndrome
345
Citations
56
References
1996
Year
Cardiac MuscleMultiple MechanismsSudden DeathSynaptic SignalingCellular PhysiologyHyperpolarization (Biology)Na+ Channel-linked LqtsInheritable Long-qt SyndromeCell SignalingCardiomyopathyMolecular PhysiologySodium HomeostasisIon ChannelsCell BiologyChannelopathiesSignal TransductionGenetic DisorderPhysiologyElectrophysiologySystems BiologyMedicine
Inheritable long-QT syndrome (LQTS) is a disease in which delayed ventricular repolarization leads to cardiac arrhythmias and the possibility of sudden death. In the chromosome 3-linked disease, one mutation of the cardiac Na+ channel gene results in a deletion of residues 1505 to 1507 (Delta KPQ), and two mutation result in substitutions (N1325S and R1644H). We compared all three mutant-channel phenotypes by heterologous expression in Xenopus oocytes. Each produced a late phase of inactivation-resistant, mexiletine- and tetrodotoxin-sensitive whole-cell currents, but the underlying mechanisms were different at the single-channel level. N1325S and R1644H showed dispersed reopenings after the initial transient, whereas Delta KPQ showed both dispersed reopenings and long-lasting bursts. Thus, two distinct biophysical defects underlie the in vitro phenotype of persistent current in Na+ channel-linked LQTS, and the additive effects of both are responsible for making the Delta KPQ phenotype the most severe.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
1981 | 18.5K | |
1995 | 2.4K | |
1991 | 2.4K | |
1995 | 2.3K | |
1991 | 1.9K | |
1996 | 1.8K | |
1995 | 1.7K | |
1990 | 1.2K | |
1995 | 967 | |
1992 | 833 |
Page 1
Page 1