Background: Women have a higher risk of lethal arrhythmias than men in long QT syndrome type 2 (LQTS2), but the mechanisms remain uncertain due to the limited availability of healthy control human tissue. We have previously reported that in female rabbits, estrogen increases arrhythmia risk in drug-induced LQTS2 by upregulating L-type Ca (I) and sodium-calcium exchange (I) currents at the base of the epicardium by a genomic mechanism. This study investigates if the effects of estrogen on rabbit I and I apply to human hearts.
Methods: Postmortem human left ventricular tissue samples were probed with selective antibodies for regional heterogeneities of ion channel protein expression and compared to rabbit myocardium. Functionally, I and I were measured from female and male cardiomyocytes derived from human induced pluripotent stem cells (iPS-CMs) with the voltage-clamp technique from control and estrogen-treated iPS-CMs.
Results: In women (n = 12), Cav1.2α (primary subunit of the L-type calcium channel protein 1) and NCX1 (sodium-calcium exchange protein) levels were higher at the base than apex of the epicardium (40 ± 14 and 81 ± 30%, respectively, P < 0.05), but not in men (n = 6) or postmenopausal women (n = 6). Similarly, in cardiomyocytes derived from female human iPS-CMs, estrogen (1 nM, 1-2 days) increased I (31%, P < 0.05) and I (7.5-fold, - 90 mV, P < 0.01) and their mRNA levels (P < 0.05). Moreover, in male human iPS-CMs, estrogen failed to alter I and I.
Conclusions: The results show that estrogen upregulates cardiac I and I in women through genomic mechanisms that account for sex differences in Ca handling and spatial heterogeneities of repolarization due to base-apex heterogeneities of Cav1.2α and NCX1. By analogy with rabbit studies, these effects account for human sex-difference in arrhythmia risk.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5557418 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13293-017-0148-4 | DOI Listing |
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