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Functional Calsequestrin-1 Is Expressed in the Heart and Its Deficiency Is Causally Related to Malignant Hyperthermia-Like Arrhythmia

Zhipeng Sun, Luqi Wang, Lu Han, Yue Wang, Yuan Zhou, Qiang Li, Yongquan Wu, Shaletanati Talabieke, Yunlong Hou, Lulin Wu, Ronghua Liu, Zhiping Fu, Hongjie You, Bai‐Yan Li, Yuanyuan Zheng, Dali Luo

2021Circulation33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Calsequestrins (Casqs), comprising the Casq1 and Casq2 isoforms, buffer Ca 2+ and regulate its release in the sarcoplasmic reticulum of skeletal and cardiac muscle, respectively. Human inherited diseases associated with mutations in CASQ1 or CASQ2 include malignant hyperthermia/environmental heat stroke (MH/EHS) and catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia. However, patients with an MH/EHS event often experience arrhythmia for which the underlying mechanism remains unknown. Methods: Working hearts from conventional ( Casq1 -KO) and cardiac-specific ( Casq1 -CKO) Casq1 knockout mice were monitored in vivo and ex vivo by ECG and electric mapping, respectively. MH was induced by 2% isoflurane and treated intraperitoneally with dantrolene. Time-lapse imaging was used to monitor intracellular Ca 2+ activity in isolated mouse cardiomyocytes or neonatal rat ventricular myocytes with knockdown, overexpression, or truncation of the Casq1 gene. Conformational change in both Casqs was determined by cross-linking Western blot analysis. Results: Like patients with MH/EHS, Casq1 -KO and Casq1 -CKO mice had faster basal heart rate and ventricular tachycardia on exposure to 2% isoflurane, which could be relieved by dantrolene. Basal sinus tachycardia and ventricular ectopic electric triggering also occurred in Casq1 -KO hearts ex vivo. Accordingly, the ventricular cardiomyocytes from Casq1 -CKO mice displayed dantrolene-sensitive increased Ca 2+ waves and diastole premature Ca 2+ transients/oscillations on isoflurane. Neonatal rat ventricular myocytes with Casq1-knockdown had enhanced spontaneous Ca 2+ sparks/transients on isoflurane, whereas cells overexpressing Casq1 exhibited decreased Ca 2+ sparks/transients that were absent in cells with truncation of 9 amino acids at the C terminus of Casq1. Structural evaluation showed that most of the Casq1 protein was present as a polymer and physically interacted with ryanodine receptor-2 in the ventricular sarcoplasmic reticulum. The Casq1 isoform was also expressed in human myocardium. Mechanistically, exposure to 2% isoflurane or heating at 41 °C induced Casq1 oligomerization in mouse ventricular and skeletal muscle tissues, leading to a reduced Casq1/ryanodine receptor-2 interaction and increased ryanodine receptor-2 activity in the ventricle. Conclusions: Casq1 is expressed in the heart, where it regulates sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca 2+ release and heart rate. Casq1 deficiency independently causes MH/EHS-like ventricular arrhythmia by trigger-induced Casq1 oligomerization and a relief of its inhibitory effect on ryanodine receptor-2–mediated Ca 2+ release, thus revealing a new inherited arrhythmia and a novel mechanism for MH/EHS arrhythmogenesis.

Topics & Concepts

IsofluraneCalsequestrinDantroleneCatecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardiaMedicineInternal medicineMalignant hyperthermiaVentricular tachycardiaRyanodine receptorAnesthesiaEndocrinologyRyanodine receptor 2ReceptorCalciumIon channel regulation and functionCardiac electrophysiology and arrhythmiasHeat shock proteins research
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