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Conserved Role of the Large Conductance Calcium-Activated Potassium Channel, KCa1.1, in Sinus Node Function and Arrhythmia Risk

Authors :
Santiago Pined
David G. Allen
Dirk F. van Helden
Sreehari Kalvakuri
Halina Dobrzyn
Christiana Leimena
Renee Johnson
Andrew Atkinson
Richard P. Harvey
Diane Fatkin
Gunjan Trived
Ann-Kristin Altekoester
Karen Ocorr
Peter C. M. Molenaar
Arie Jacoby
Charles D. Cox
Dennis L. Kuchar
Rolf Bodmer
Monique Ohanian
Inken G. Huttner
Georg Vogler
Magdalena Soka
Vesna Nikolova-Krstevski
Yue-Kun Ju
Adam P. Hill
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

BackgroundKCNMA1 encodes the α-subunit of the large-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channel, KCa1.1, and lies within a linkage interval for atrial fibrillation (AF). Insights into the cardiac functions of KCa1.1 are limited and KCNMA1 has not been investigated as an AF candidate gene.Methods and ResultsKCNMA1 sequencing in 118 patients with familial AF identified a novel complex variant in one kindred. To evaluate potential disease mechanisms, we first evaluated the distribution of KCa1.1 in normal hearts using immunostaining and immunogold electron microscopy. KCa1.1 was seen throughout the atria and ventricles in humans and mice, with strong expression in the sinus node. In an ex vivo murine sinoatrial node preparation, addition of the KCa1.1 antagonist, paxilline, blunted the increase in beating rate induced by adrenergic receptor stimulation. Knockdown of the KCa1.1 ortholog, kcnma1b, in zebrafish embryos resulted in sinus bradycardia with dilatation and reduced contraction of the atrium and ventricle. Genetic inactivation of the Drosophila KCa1.1 ortholog, slo, systemically or in adult stages, also slowed the heartbeat and produced cardiac arrhythmias.Electrophysiological characterization of slo-deficient flies revealed bursts of action potentials, reflecting increased events of fibrillatory arrhythmias. Flies with cardiac-specific overexpression of the human KCNMA1 mutant also showed increased heart period and bursts of action potentials, similar to the KCa1.1 loss-of-function models.ConclusionsOur data point to a highly conserved role of KCa1.1 in sinus node function in humans, mice, zebrafish and fly and suggest that KCa1.1 loss of function may predispose to AF.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........47d38efcb107ad676586738e523b836b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.06.28.176495