Phenotype Variability in Patients Carrying
KCNJ2
Mutations
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Published:2012-06
Issue:3
Volume:5
Page:344-353
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ISSN:1942-325X
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Container-title:Circulation: Cardiovascular Genetics
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Circ Cardiovasc Genet
Author:
Kimura Hiromi1, Zhou Jun1, Kawamura Mihoko1, Itoh Hideki1, Mizusawa Yuka1, Ding Wei-Guang1, Wu Jie1, Ohno Seiko1, Makiyama Takeru1, Miyamoto Akashi1, Naiki Nobu1, Wang Qi1, Xie Yu1, Suzuki Tsugutoshi1, Tateno Shigeru1, Nakamura Yoshihide1, Zang Wei-Jin1, Ito Makoto1, Matsuura Hiroshi1, Horie Minoru1
Affiliation:
1. From the Department of Cardiovascular and Respiratory Medicine (H.K., J.Z., M.K., H.I., Y.M., J.W., S.O., A.M., N.N., Q.W., M.I., M.H.) and the Department of Physiology (W.-G.D., Y.X., H.M.), Shiga University of Medical Science, Otsu, Japan; the Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Kyoto University Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto, Japan (T.M.); the Department of Pediatric Electrophysiology, Osaka City General Hospital, Osaka, Japan (T.S.); the Department of Pediatrics, Chiba Cardiovascular...
Abstract
Background—
Mutations of
KCNJ2
, the gene encoding the human inward rectifier potassium channel Kir2.1, cause Andersen-Tawil syndrome (ATS), a disease exhibiting ventricular arrhythmia, periodic paralysis, and dysmorphic features. However, some
KCNJ2
mutation carriers lack the ATS triad and sometimes share the phenotype of catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT). We investigated clinical and biophysical characteristics of
KCNJ2
mutation carriers with “atypical ATS.”
Methods and Results—
Mutational analyses of
KCNJ2
were performed in 57 unrelated probands showing typical (≥2 ATS features) and atypical (only 1 of the ATS features or CPVT) ATS. We identified 24 mutation carriers. Mutation-positive rates were 75% (15/20) in typical ATS, 71% (5/7) in cardiac phenotype alone, 100% (2/2) in periodic paralysis, and 7% (2/28) in CPVT. We divided all carriers (n=45, including family members) into 2 groups: typical ATS (A) (n=21, 47%) and atypical phenotype (B) (n=24, 53%). Patients in (A) had a longer QUc interval [(A): 695±52 versus (B): 643±35 ms] and higher U-wave amplitude (0.24±0.07 versus 0.18±0.08 mV). C-terminal mutations were more frequent in (A) (85% versus 38%,
P
<0.05). There were no significant differences in incidences of ventricular tachyarrhythmias. Functional analyses of 4 mutations found in (B) revealed that R82Q, R82W, and G144D exerted strong dominant negative suppression (current reduction by 95%, 97%, and 96%, respectively, versus WT at −50 mV) and T305S moderate suppression (reduction by 89%).
Conclusions—
KCNJ2
gene screening in atypical ATS phenotypes is of clinical importance because more than half of mutation carriers express atypical phenotypes, despite their arrhythmia severity.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Subject
Genetics(clinical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Genetics
Cited by
80 articles.
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