Title of article :
Postmortem molecular screening in unexplained sudden death Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
Sumeet S Chugh، نويسنده , , Olga Senashova، نويسنده , , Allison Watts، نويسنده , , Phuoc T Tran، نويسنده , , Zhengfeng Zhou، نويسنده , , Qiuming Gong، نويسنده , , Jack L Titus، نويسنده , , Susan J Hayflick، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
Objectives
We examined the prevalence of defects in arrhythmia-related candidate genes among patients with unexplained sudden cardiac death (SCD).
Background
Patients with unexplained sudden death may constitute up to 5% of overall SCD cases. For such patients, systematic postmortem genetic analysis of archived tissue, using a candidate gene approach, may identify etiologies of SCD.
Methods
We performed analysis of KCNQ1 (KVLQT1), KCNH2 (HERG), SCN5A, KCNE1, and KCNE2 defects in a subgroup of 12 adult subjects with unexplained sudden death, derived from a 13-year, 270-patient autopsy series of SCD. Archived, paraffin-embedded myocardial tissue blocks obtained at the original postmortem examination were the source of deoxyribonucleic acid for genetic analysis.
Results
Two patients were found to have the same HERG defect, a missense mutation in exon 7 (nucleotide change G1681A, coding effect A561T). The mutation was heterozygous in Patient 1, but Patient 2 appeared to be homozygous for the defect. Patch-clamp recordings showed that the A561T mutant channel expressed in human embryonic kidney cells failed to generate HERG current. Western blot analysis implicated a trafficking defect in the protein, resulting in loss of post-translational processing from the immature to the mature form of HERG. No mutations were detected among the remaining four candidate genes.
Conclusions
In this autopsy series, only 2 of 12 patients with unexplained sudden death were observed to have a defect in HERG among five candidate genes tested. It is likely that elucidation of SCD mechanisms in such patients will await the discovery of multiple, novel arrhythmia-causing gene defects.
Keywords :
ECG , polymerase chain reaction , long QT syndrome , PCR , HEK , SSCP , Sudden cardiac death , SCD , Electrocardiogram , LQTS , human embryonic kidney , single-stranded conformational polymorphism
Journal title :
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)
Journal title :
JACC (Journal of the American College of Cardiology)