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Tubulin polymerization modifies cardiac sodium channel expression and gating

Authors :
Connie R. Bezzina
Ahmad S. Amin
Marieke W. Veldkamp
Jan M. Ruijter
Antoni C.G. van Ginneken
Carol Ann Remme
Brendon P. Scicluna
Houssine Chatyan
Ilker Demirayak
Simona Casini
Hanno L. Tan
Other departments
Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences
Cardiology
Center of Experimental and Molecular Medicine
Amsterdam Reproduction & Development (AR&D)
Medical Biology
Source :
Cardiovascular research, 85(4), 691-700. Oxford University Press
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2009.

Abstract

Treatment with the anticancer drug taxol (TXL), which polymerizes the cytoskeleton protein tubulin, may evoke cardiac arrhythmias based on reduced human cardiac sodium channel (Na(v)1.5) function. Therefore, we investigated whether enhanced tubulin polymerization by TXL affects Na(v)1.5 function and expression and whether these effects are beta(1)-subunit-mediated. Human embryonic kidney (HEK293) cells, transfected with SCN5A cDNA alone (Na(v)1.5) or together with SCN1B cDNA (Na(v)1.5 + beta(1)), and neonatal rat cardiomyocytes (NRCs) were incubated in the presence and in the absence of 100 mu M TXL. Sodium current (I-Na) characteristics were studied using patch-clamp techniques. Na(v)1.5 membrane expression was determined by immunocytochemistry and confocal microscopy. Pre-treatment with TXL reduced peak I-Na amplitude nearly two-fold in both Na(v)1.5 and Na(v)1.5 + beta(1), as well as in NRCs, compared with untreated cells. Accordingly, HEK293 cells and NRCs stained with anti-Na(v)1.5 antibody revealed a reduced membrane-labelling intensity in the TXL-treated groups. In addition, TXL accelerated I-Na decay of Na(v)1.5 + beta(1), whereas I-Na decay of Na(v)1.5 remained unaltered. Finally, TXL reduced the fraction of channels that slow inactivated from 31% to 18%, and increased the time constant of slow inactivation by two-fold in Na(v)1.5. Conversely, slow inactivation properties of Na(v)1.5 + beta(1) were unchanged by TXL. Enhanced tubulin polymerization reduces sarcolemmal Na(v)1.5 expression and I-Na amplitude in a beta(1)-subunit-independent fashion and causes I-Na fast and slow inactivation impairment in a beta(1)-subunit-dependent way. These changes may underlie conduction-slowing-dependent cardiac arrhythmias under conditions of enhanced tubulin polymerization, e.g. TXL treatment and heart failure

Details

ISSN :
17553245 and 00086363
Volume :
85
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cardiovascular Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bd8eea834bfd350642d70f33fed40279
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/cvr/cvp352