Slowed conduction and ventricular tachycardia after targeted disruption of the cardiac sodium channel gene Scn5a


Autoria(s): Papadatos, G. Alex; Wallerstein, Polly M. R.; Head, Catherine E. G.; Ratcliff, Rosemary; Brady, Peter A.; Benndorf, Klause; Saumarez, Richard C.; Trezise, Ann E. O.; Huang, Christopher L. -H.; Vandenberg, Jamie I.; Colledge, William H.; Grace, Andrew A.
Data(s)

30/04/2002

Resumo

Voltage-gated sodium channels drive the initial depolarization phase of the cardiac action potential and therefore critically determine conduction of excitation through the heart. In patients, deletions or loss-of-function mutations of the cardiac sodium channel gene, SCN5A, have been associated with a wide range of arrhythmias including bradycardia (heart rate slowing), atrioventricular conduction delay, and ventricular fibrillation. The pathophysiological basis of these clinical conditions is unresolved. Here we show that disruption of the mouse cardiac sodium channel gene, Scn5a, causes intrauterine lethality in homozygotes with severe defects in ventricular morphogenesis whereas heterozygotes show normal survival. Whole-cell patch clamp analyses of isolated ventricular myocytes from adult Scn5a(+/-) mice demonstrate a approximate to50% reduction in sodium conductance. Scn5a(+/-) hearts have several defects including impaired atrioventricular conduction, delayed intramyocardial conduction, increased ventricular refractoriness, and ventricular tachycardia with characteristics of reentrant excitation. These findings reconcile reduced activity of the cardiac sodium channel leading to slowed conduction with several apparently diverse clinical phenotypes, providing a model for the detailed analysis of the pathophysiology of arrhythmias.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:63391

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

National Academy of Science

Palavras-Chave #Multidisciplinary Sciences #Long-qt Syndrome #Electrogram Fractionation #Atrioventricular Node #Molecular Mechanism #Brugada-syndrome #Mice #Arrhythmias #Heart #Fibrillation #Excitability #Cardiac & Cardiovascular Systems #C1 #270502 Neurobiology #780105 Biological sciences
Tipo

Journal Article