Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a common heart muscle disorder that frequently leads to heart failure, arrhythmias, and death. While DCM is often heritable, disease-causing mutations are identified in only ~30% of cases. In a forward genetic mutagenesis screen, we identified a novel zebrafish mutant, (), characterized by early-onset cardiomyopathy and craniofacial defects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose Of Review: Truncating TTN variants (TTNtv) are the most common genetic cause of dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), but the underlying mechanisms are incompletely understood and effective therapeutic strategies are lacking. Here we review recent data that shed new light on the functional consequences of TTNtv and how these effects may vary with mutation location.
Recent Findings: Whether TTNtv act by haploinsufficiency or dominant negative effects has been hotly debated.
Background: encodes the α-subunit of the large-conductance Ca-activated K channel, K1.1, and lies within a linkage interval for atrial fibrillation (AF). Insights into the cardiac functions of K1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Cardiovasc Dev Dis
January 2021
Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a common heart muscle disorder characterized by ventricular dilation and contractile dysfunction that is associated with significant morbidity and mortality. New insights into disease mechanisms and strategies for treatment and prevention are urgently needed. Truncating variants in the gene, which encodes the giant sarcomeric protein titin (tv), are the most common genetic cause of DCM, but exactly how tv promote cardiomyocyte dysfunction is not known.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrecision medicine promises to dramatically improve patient outcomes and reduce health care costs through a shift in focus from disease treatment to prevention and individualized therapies. For families with inherited cardiomyopathies, efforts to date have been directed toward discovery and functional characterization of single disease-causing variants. With advances in sequencing, the cataloging of personal genetic variation has been expedited, providing improved insights into the key importance of the genes in which variants occur.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose Of Review: Atrial cardiomyopathy is a frequently encountered but underappreciated clinical entity that is characterized by altered atrial size and function. Although traditionally considered a primary atrial disorder, atrial cardiomyopathy was recently redefined to include secondary atrial remodelling. This conceptual shift has implications for the scope of etiological factors and intervention strategies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground Truncating variants in the TTN gene ( TTNtv) are common in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) but also occur in the general population. Whether TTNtv are sufficient to cause DCM or require a second hit for DCM manifestation is an important clinical issue. Methods We generated a zebrafish model of an A-band TTNtv identified in 2 human DCM families in which early-onset disease appeared to be precipitated by ventricular volume overload.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMechanoelectrical feedback may increase arrhythmia susceptibility, but the molecular mechanisms are incompletely understood. This study showed that mechanical stretch altered the localization, protein levels, and function of the cation-selective transient receptor potential channel (TRPC)-6 in atrial endocardial cells in humans, pigs, and mice. In endocardial/myocardial cross-talk studies, addition of media from porcine atrial endocardium (AE) cells altered the calcium (Ca) transient characteristics of human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZebrafish are increasingly used as a vertebrate model to study human cardiovascular disorders. Although heart structure and function are readily visualized in zebrafish embryos because of their optical transparency, the lack of effective tools for evaluating the hearts of older, nontransparent fish has been a major limiting factor. The recent development of high-frequency echocardiography has been an important advance for cardiac assessment, but it necessitates anesthesia and has limited ability to study acute interventions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn endurance athletes, prolonged high intensity exercise participation can have deleterious effects on the myocardium with subsequent structural and electrical remodelling. In a subset of athletes, there is a predilection for atrial involvement and the risk of atrial fibrillation (AF) is increased. The mechanisms underpinning exercise-induced atrial cardiomyopathy have yet to be fully elucidated and the contribution of an individual's genetic makeup is unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEchocardiography is an invaluable tool for characterizing cardiac structure and function in vivo. Technological advances in high-frequency ultrasound over the past 3 decades have increased spatial and temporal resolution, and facilitated many important clinical and basic science discoveries. Successful reverse translation of established echocardiographic techniques, including M-mode, B-mode, color Doppler, pulsed-wave Doppler, tissue Doppler and, most recently, myocardial deformation imaging, from clinical cardiology into the basic science laboratory has enabled researchers to achieve a deeper understanding of myocardial phenotypes in health and disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenetic variation is an important determinant of atrial fibrillation (AF) susceptibility. Numerous rare variants in protein-coding sequences of genes have been associated with AF in families and in early-onset cases, and chromosomal loci harbouring common risk variants have been mapped in AF cohorts. Many of these loci are in non-coding regions of the human genome and are thought to contain regulatory sequences that modulate gene expression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Opin Cardiol
May 2017
Purpose Of Review: Truncating variants in the TTN gene (TTNtv) are frequently identified in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) but are also present in apparently healthy people in the general population. Consequently, there is considerable uncertainty about what it means for any single individual if a TTNtv is found. The aim of this review is to summarize current evidence implicating TTNtv in DCM pathogenesis and to provide some interpretative guidelines for clinical management.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe zebrafish (Danio rerio) is an increasingly popular model organism in cardiovascular research. Major insights into cardiac developmental processes have been gained by studies of embryonic zebrafish. However, the utility of zebrafish for modeling adult-onset heart disease has been limited by a lack of robust methods for in vivo evaluation of cardiac function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe two-pore domain potassium (K(+)) channel TWIK-1 (or K2P1.1) contributes to background K(+) conductance in diverse cell types. TWIK-1, encoded by the KCNK1 gene, is present in the human heart with robust expression in the atria, however its physiological significance is unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe two-pore domain potassium channel, K2P3.1 (TASK-1) modulates background conductance in isolated human atrial cardiomyocytes and has been proposed as a potential drug target for atrial fibrillation (AF). TASK-1 knockout mice have a predominantly ventricular phenotype however, and effects of TASK-1 inactivation on atrial structure and function have yet to be demonstrated in vivo.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe recent exponential increase in human genetic studies due to the advances of next generation sequencing has generated unprecedented numbers of new gene variants. Determining which of these are causative of human disease is a major challenge. In-vitro studies and murine models have been used to study inherited cardiac arrhythmias but have several limitations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntegrin-linked kinase (ILK) is an essential component of the cardiac mechanical stretch sensor and is bound in a protein complex with parvin and PINCH proteins, the so-called ILK-PINCH-parvin (IPP) complex. We have recently shown that inactivation of ILK or β-parvin activity leads to heart failure in zebrafish via reduced protein kinase B (PKB/Akt) activation. Here, we show that PINCH proteins localize at sarcomeric Z disks and costameres in the zebrafish heart and skeletal muscle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFYeast frequenin (Frq1), a small N-myristoylated EF-hand protein, activates phosphatidylinositol 4-kinase Pik1. The NMR structure of Ca2+-bound Frq1 complexed to an N-terminal Pik1 fragment (residues 121-174) was determined. The Frq1 main chain is similar to that in free Frq1 and related proteins in the same branch of the calmodulin superfamily.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe vertebrate heart possesses autoregulatory mechanisms enabling it first to sense and then to adapt its force of contraction to continually changing demands. The molecular components of the cardiac mechanical stretch sensor are mostly unknown but of immense medical importance, since dysfunction of this sensing machinery is suspected to be responsible for a significant proportion of human heart failure. In the hearts of the ethylnitros-urea (ENU)-induced, recessive embryonic lethal zebrafish heart failure mutant main squeeze (msq), we find stretch-responsive genes such as atrial natriuretic factor (anf) and vascular endothelial growth factor (vegf) severely down-regulated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFrq1, a 190-residue N-myristoylated calcium-binding protein, associates tightly with the N terminus of Pik1, a 1066-residue phosphatidylinositol 4-kinase. Deletion analysis of an Frq1-binding fragment, Pik1-(10-192), showed that residues within 80-192 are necessary and sufficient for Frq1 association in vitro. A synthetic peptide (residues 151-199) competed for binding of [(35)S]Pik1-(10-192) to bead-immobilized Frq1, whereas shorter peptides (164-199 and 174-199) did not.
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