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    Circ Res. 2004 Dec 10;95(12):1216-24. Epub 2004 Nov 4.

    Proarrhythmic consequences of a KCNQ1 AKAP-binding domain mutation: computational models of whole cells and heterogeneous tissue.

    Source

    Department of Bioengineering, Whitaker Institute of Biomedical Engineering, University of California San Diego, La Jolla92037-0412, USA.

    Abstract

    The KCNQ1-G589D gene mutation, associated with a long-QT syndrome, has been shown to disrupt yotiao-mediated targeting of protein kinase A and protein phosphatase-1 to the I(Ks) channel. To investigate how this defect may lead to ventricular arrhythmia during sympathetic stimulation, we use integrative computational models of beta-adrenergic signaling, myocyte excitation-contraction coupling, and action potential propagation in a rabbit ventricular wedge. Paradoxically, we find that the KCNQ1-G589D mutation alone does not prolong the QT interval. But when coupled with beta-adrenergic stimulation in a whole-cell model, the KCNQ1-G589D mutation induced QT prolongation and transient afterdepolarizations, known cellular mechanisms for arrhythmogenesis. These cellular mechanisms amplified tissue heterogeneities in a three-dimensional rabbit ventricular wedge model, elevating transmural dispersion of repolarization and creating other T-wave abnormalities on simulated electrocardiograms. Increasing heart rate protected both single myocyte and the coupled myocardium models from arrhythmic consequences. These findings suggest that the KCNQ1-G589D mutation disrupts a critical link between beta-adrenergic signaling and myocyte electrophysiology, creating both triggers of cardiac arrhythmia and a myocardial substrate vulnerable to such electrical disturbances.

    PMID:
    15528464
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    Free full text

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