Gene Transfer of a Synthetic Pacemaker Channel Into the Heart

Guinea Pigs Gene Transfer Techniques Heart Ion Channels Cell Line 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Biological Clocks Animals Humans Kv1.4 Potassium Channel Female Myocytes, Cardiac Ion Channel Gating
DOI: 10.1161/circulationaha.106.634865 Publication Date: 2006-10-10T01:02:02Z
ABSTRACT
Background— One key element of natural pacemakers is the pacemaker current encoded by the hyperpolarization-activated nucleotide-gated channel (HCN) gene family. Although HCN gene transfer has been used to engineer biological pacemakers, this strategy may be confounded by unpredictable consequences of heteromultimerization with endogenous HCN family members and limited flexibility with regard to frequency tuning of the engineered pacemaker. Methods and Results— To circumvent these limitations, we converted a depolarization-activated potassium-selective channel, Kv1.4, into a hyperpolarization-activated nonselective channel by site-directed mutagenesis (R447N, L448A, and R453I in S4 and G528S in the pore). Gene transfer into ventricular myocardium demonstrated the ability of this construct to induce pacemaker activity with spontaneous action potential oscillations in adult ventricular myocytes and idioventricular rhythms by in vivo electrocardiography. Conclusions— Given the sparse expression of Kv1 family channels in the human ventricle, gene transfer of a synthetic pacemaker channel based on the Kv1 family has novel therapeutic potential as a biological alternative to electronic pacemakers.
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