PubMed 12710526
Referenced in: none
Automatically associated channels: Kv7.1
Title: Biophysical characteristics of a new mutation on the KCNQ1 potassium channel (L251P) causing long QT syndrome.
Authors: Dominic Deschênes, Said Acharfi, Valerie Pouliot, Robert Hegele, Andrew Krahn, Pascal Daleau, Mohamed Chahine
Journal, date & volume: Can. J. Physiol. Pharmacol., 2003 Feb , 81, 129-34
PubMed link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12710526
Abstract
The congenital long QT syndrome (LQTS) is a hereditary cardiac disease characterized by prolonged ventricular repolarization, syncope, and sudden death. Mutations causing LQTS have been identified in various genes that encode for ionic channels or their regulatory subunits. Several of these mutations have been reported on the KCNQ1 gene encoding for a potassium channel or its regulatory subunit (KCNE1). In this study, we report the biophysical characteristics of a new mutation (L251P) in the transmembrane segment 5 (S5) of the KCNQ1 potassium channel. Potassium currents were recorded from CHO cells transfected with either wild type or mutant KCNQ1 in the presence or in the absence of its regulatory subunit (KCNE1), using the whole-cell configuration of the patch clamp technique. Wild-type KCNQ1 current amplitudes are increased particularly by KCNE1 co-expression but no current is observed with the KCNQ1 (L251P) mutant either in the presence or in the absence of KCNE1. Coexpressing KCNE1 with equal amount of cDNAs encoding wild type and mutant KCNQ1 results in an 11-fold reduction in the amplitude of potassium currents. The kinetics of activation and inactivation and the activation curve are minimally affected by this mutation. Our results suggest that the dominant negative effect of the P251L mutation on KCNQ1 channel explains the prolonged repolarization in patients carrying this mutation.