5 research outputs found
Mutations and SNPs of human cardiac sodium channel alpha subunit gene (SCN5A) in Japanese patients with Brugada syndrome
Background: Brugada syndrome is an inherited arrhythmogenic disease characterized by right bundle branch block pattern and ST segment elevation, leading to the change of V1 to V3 on electrocardiogram, and an increased risk of sudden cardiac death resulting from ventricular fibrillation. The sodium channel alpha 5 subunit (SCN5A) gene encodes a cardiac voltage-dependent sodium channel, and SCN5A mutations have been reported in Brugada syndrome. However, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and gene mutations have not been well investigated in Japanese patients with Brugada syndrome.
Methods and Results: The SCN5A gene was examined in 58 patients by using PCR and the ABI 3130xl sequencer, revealing 17 SNP patterns and 13 mutations. Of the 13 mutations, 8 were missense mutations (with amino acid change), 4 were silent mutations (without amino acid change), and one case was a mutation within the splicing junction. Six of the eight missense mutations were novel mutations. Interestingly, we detected an R1664H mutation, which was identified originally in long QT syndrome.
Conclusion: We found 13 mutations of the SCN5A gene in 58 patients with Brugada syndrome. The disease may be attributable to some of the mutations and SNPs
Cardiac Sodium Channel (Dys)Function and Inherited Arrhythmia Syndromes
Normal cardiac sodium channel function is essential for ensuring excitability of myocardial cells and proper conduction of the electrical impulse within the heart. Cardiac sodium channel dysfunction is associated with an increased risk of arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death. Over the last 20 years, (combined) genetic, electrophysiological, and molecular studies have provided insight into the (dys)function and (dys)regulation of the cardiac sodium channel under physiological circumstances and in the setting of SCN5A mutations identified in patients with inherited arrhythmia syndromes. Although our understanding of these sodium channelopathies has increased substantially, important issues remain incompletely understood. It has become increasingly clear that sodium channel distribution, function, and regulation are more complicated than traditionally assumed. Moreover, recent evidence suggests that the sodium channel may play additional, as of yet unrecognized, roles in cardiomyocyte function, which in turn may ultimately also impact on arrhythmogenesis. In this chapter, an overview is provided of the structure and function of the cardiac sodium channel and the clinical and biophysical characteristics of inherited sodium channel dysfunction. In addition, more recent insights into the electrophysiological and molecular aspects of sodium channel dysregulation and dysfunction in the setting of SCN5A mutations are discussed