Abstract

Voltage-gated sodium channels (Nav) are widely expressed as macro-molecular complexes in both excitable and non-excitable tissues. In excitable tissues, the upstroke of the action potential is the result of the passage of a large and rapid influx of sodium ions through these channels. NaV dysfunction has been associated with an increasingly wide range of neurological, muscular and cardiac disorders. The purpose of this review is to summarize the recently identified sodium channel mutations that are linked to hyper-excitability phenotypes and associated with the alteration of the activation process of voltage gated sodium channels. Indeed, several clinical manifestations that demonstrate an alteration of tissue excitability were recently shown to be strongly associated with the presence of mutations that affect the activation process of the Nav. These emerging genotype-phenotype correlations have expanded the clinical spectrum of sodium channelopathies to include disorders which feature a hyper-excitability phenotype that may or may not be associated with a cardiomyopathy. The p.I141V mutation in SCN4A and SCN5A, as well as its homologous p.I136V mutation in SCN9A, are interesting examples of mutations that have been linked to inherited hyperexcitability myotonia, exercise-induced polymorphic ventricular arrhythmias and erythromelalgia, respectively. Regardless of which sodium channel isoform is investigated, the substitution of the isoleucine to valine in the locus 141 induces similar modifications in the biophysical properties of the Nav by shifting the voltage-dependence of steady state activation toward more negative potentials.

Highlights

  • In excitable tissues, action potential initiation and propagation are the result of the passage of a large and rapid influx of sodium ions through the voltage-gated sodium channels (NaV)

  • The purpose of this review is to summarize the recently identified sodium channel mutations that are linked to hyper-excitability phenotypes and associated with the alteration of the activation process of voltage gated sodium channels

  • The first four segments (S1– S4) comprise the voltage-sensing domain (VSD), and the last two segments (S5 and S6) form the pore of the channel when assembled in a tetrameric configuration (Figure 1) (Payandeh et al, 2011)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Action potential initiation and propagation are the result of the passage of a large and rapid influx of sodium ions through the voltage-gated sodium channels (NaV). These channels consist of highly processed α-subunits that are present as nine different isoforms (Goldin et al, 2000). Similar to that described for the sodium channel α-subunits, mutation in genes encoding the Nav-interacting proteins have been linked to the occurrence of several inherited diseases (Abriel, 2010; Catterall, 2014). The purpose of this review is to summarize the recently identified sodium channel mutations that are linked to cardiac hyperexcitability phenotypes and associated with the alteration of the activation process of voltage gated sodium channels

Inherited sodium channelopathies
CONCLUSION
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