• Heart Rhythm · Jan 2007

    Case Reports

    A sodium channel pore mutation causing Brugada syndrome.

    • Arnold E Pfahnl, Prakash C Viswanathan, Raul Weiss, Lijuan L Shang, Shamarendra Sanyal, Vladimir Shusterman, Cari Kornblit, Barry London, and Samuel C Dudley.
    • Division of Cardiology, Atlanta Veterans Affairs Medical Center and Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia 30033, USA.
    • Heart Rhythm. 2007 Jan 1;4(1):46-53.

    BackgroundBrugada and long QT type 3 syndromes are linked to sodium channel mutations and clinically cause arrhythmias that lead to sudden death. We have identified a novel threonine-to-isoleucine missense mutation at position 353 (T353I) adjacent to the pore-lining region of domain I of the cardiac sodium channel (SCN5A) in a family with Brugada syndrome. Both male and female carriers are symptomatic at young ages, have typical Brugada-type electrocardiogram changes, and have relatively normal corrected QT intervals.ObjectivesTo characterize the properties of the newly identified cardiac sodium channel (SCN5A) mutation at the cellular level.ResultsUsing whole-cell voltage clamp, we found that heterologous expression of SCN5A containing the T353I mutation resulted in 74% +/- 6% less peak macroscopic sodium current when compared with wild-type channels. A construct of the T353I mutant channel fused with green fluorescent protein failed to traffic properly to the sarcolemma, with a large proportion of channels sequestered intracellularly. Overnight exposure to 0.1 mM mexiletine, a Na(+) channel blocking agent, increased T353I channel trafficking to the membrane to near normal levels, but the mutant channels showed a significant late current that was 1.6% +/- 0.2% of peak sodium current at 200 ms, a finding seen with long QT mutations.ConclusionsThe clinical presentation of patients carrying the T353I mutation is that of Brugada syndrome and could be explained by a cardiac Na(+) channel trafficking defect. However, when the defect was ameliorated, the mutated channels had biophysical properties consistent with long QT syndrome. The lack of phenotypic changes associated with the long QT syndrome could be explained by a T353I-induced trafficking defect reducing the number of mutant channels with persistent currents present at the sarcolemma.

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