Abstract

Researchers and clinicians have discovered several important concepts regarding the mechanisms responsible for increased risk of arrhythmias, heart failure, and sudden cardiac death. One major step in defining the molecular basis of normal and abnormal cardiac electrical behavior has been the identification of single mutations that greatly increase the risk for arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death by changing channel-gating characteristics. Indeed, mutations in several genes encoding ion channels, such as SCN5A, which encodes the major cardiac Na+ channel, have emerged as the basis for a variety of inherited cardiac arrhythmias such as long QT syndrome, Brugada syndrome, progressive cardiac conduction disorder, sinus node dysfunction, or sudden infant death syndrome. In addition, genes encoding ion channel accessory proteins, like anchoring or chaperone proteins, which modify the expression, the regulation of endocytosis, and the degradation of ion channel a-subunits have also been reported as susceptibility genes for arrhythmic syndromes. The regulation of ion channel protein expression also depends on a fine-tuned balance among different other mechanisms, such as gene transcription, RNA processing, post-transcriptional control of gene expression by miRNA, protein synthesis, assembly and post-translational modification and trafficking. The aim of this review is to inventory, through the description of few representative examples, the role of these different biogenic mechanisms in arrhythmogenesis, HF and SCD in order to help the researcher to identify all the processes that could lead to arrhythmias. Identification of novel targets for drug intervention should result from further understanding of these fundamental mechanisms.

Highlights

  • More than 300,000 cases of sudden cardiac death (SCD) occur in the United States, representing a major public health concern (George, 2013)

  • One major step in defining the molecular basis of normal and abnormal cardiac electrical behavior has been the identification of single mutations that greatly increase the risk for arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death by changing channel-gating characteristics

  • The aim of this review is to inventory, through the description of few representative examples, the role of these different biogenic mechanisms in arrhythmogenesis, Heart failure (HF) and SCD in order to help the researcher to identify all the processes that could lead to arrhythmias

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

More than 300,000 cases of sudden cardiac death (SCD) occur in the United States, representing a major public health concern (George, 2013). SCD mainly results from severe ventricular arrhythmias, ventricular fibrillation being the most common underlying arrhythmia These arrhythmias can be the result of a variety of structural changes of the heart or ion channel dysfunctions sometimes through an altered expression. Mouse models of related cardiac arrhythmias, which recapitulate for most of them the clinical phenotypes of the patients, have helped us to elucidate the pathophysiological relevance of these mechanisms (Derangeon et al, 2013; Remme, 2013a). In HF, and in other cardiac diseases, arrhythmias have been shown to be secondary to electrical remodeling i.e., altered expression of ion channels (Nattel et al, 2010), studied mainly at the mRNA level, post-transcriptional processes could be involved (for review see, Zorio et al, 2009; Kim, 2013)

Impact of mutation in SCD
GENE TRANSCRIPTION AND RNA PROCESSING
CONCLUSIONS
Findings
Biology of cardiac sodium channel
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