| Aug. 31, 2000
Media contact: Sue
Pondrom (619) 543-6163
UCSD RESEARCHERS DISCOVER
GENETIC PATHWAY
FOR SUDDEN CARDIAC DEATH
Researchers in the University
of California, San Diego (UCSD) Institute of Molecular Medicine have
discovered a new genetic pathway that plays a pivotal role in the
onset of sudden cardiac death, a leading cause of cardiovascular
mortality that affects 400,000 Americans each year.
Reported in the Sept. 1, 2000
issue of Cell, their findings hold promise for the future
development of biologically targeted therapies for lethal ventricular
arrhythmias, or abnormal heart rhythms, and sudden cardiac death.
In a five-year effort, led by
Van T.B. Nguyen-Tran, Ph.D. in the laboratory of Kenneth R. Chien,
M.D., Ph.D., director of the UCSD Institute of Molecular Medicine,
researchers have found clear evidence in mice that defects in the
genes that guide the formation of the heart’s pathway of critical
electrical wiring may lead to ventricular arrhythmia and sudden death.
For the first time, research
has shown that sudden cardiac death may involve a pathway that
controls the formation of specialized pacemaker cells in the heart,
according to Nguyen-Tran. These cells, which serve as electrical wires
that control the heart rate, originate from neighboring cardiac muscle
cells. Under the guidance of molecular switches, a panel of genes are
turned on which are specific for pacemaker cells. Defects in these
switches have now been identified as a direct cause of sudden death.
Even though sudden cardiac
death is a major manifestation of heart disease, understanding of the
precise molecular and cellular pathways that lead to its onset is very
limited at present. Currently, sudden cardiac death is largely
untreatable using drug-based approaches, and implantable
defibrillators are the only accepted form of therapy. Tragically, most
victims appear perfectly normal before they collapse and die from
sudden cardiac arrest caused when the heart’s electrical impulses
become chaotic and the heart stops beating. In order to develop
biologically targeted therapy, the identification of new pathways that
lead to sudden cardiac death must be identified in experimental
systems.

Despite the recent discovery
of inherited mutations in potassium and sodium channel genes that can
lead to sudden cardiac death, further research found that only 1% of
the sudden death patients had the mutation, and only 20% of family
members with the disease gene ultimately suffer from sudden cardiac
death. This led the UCSD researchers to search for what they called
the "second hit," or additional pathways that produce lethal
ventricular arrhythmias.
To arrive at their findings,
the researchers first identified a transcription factor, HF-1b, a
"molecular switch" that controls the expression of specific
genes found in heart muscle tissue, and the conduction system, which
contains the natural pacemaker cells of the heart. Then, they
genetically engineered a mouse that was totally deficient in the HF-1b
gene. Nguyen-Tran and her team determined that mice which cannot make
HF-1b have a high incidence of sudden death (60%) and are highly
susceptible to rhythm disturbances that are identical to those
observed in the human population.
To study the cellular
pacemaker function and capture naturally occurring sudden death in the
surviving HF-1b mutant mice, Nguyen-Tran needed to accumulate an
enormous amount of electrical recording data from a very small species
that has a heart rate of more than 500 beats per minute. The team used
miniaturized implanted radio telemetry technology similar to field
technology used to track large species in the wild. They also modified
their computer hardware to continuously capture and analyze the
electrocardiogram (EKG) data 24-hours-a-day over several months.
"In readings accumulated
for more than half a year, we found that every aspect of the
conduction system was abnormal in these HF-1b deficient mice,"
Nguyen-Tran said. "Continuous heart recordings in these mutant
animals clearly documented cardiac arrhythmias as the cause of
death."
To determine if the widespread
rhythm disturbances in the HF-1b mutant animals reflected structural
defects in the cardiac conduction system, specific molecular markers
were used to distinguish the conduction tissue from the heart muscle
tissue. Results from these analyses revealed defects in the conduction
tissue as well as in the cardiac muscle cells in mice that lack the
HF-1b transcription factor.
In the Cell article,
the researchers said "the present study provides several lines of
evidence to support a critical role of HF-1b in the
electrophysiological transition between ventricular and conduction
system cell lineages."
In praising Nguyen-Tran and
her team, Chien noted that "lots of science still needs to be
done to determine the secreted factors that guide the formation of
heart pacemaker and conduction cells. Using DNA array and other
post-genome technology, we need to identify the genes upstream and
downstream in the HF-1b pathway that may contribute to sudden cardiac
death."
Within the next year, the
researchers also hope to collect and test human tissue from tissue
banks and patients who have survived life-threatening ventricular
arrhythmias.
In addition to Nguyen-Tran and
Chien, the study’s co-authors include Susumu Minamisawa, Kai C.
Wollert, Anne B. Brown, Pilar Ruiz-Lozano, Stephanie Barrere-Lemaire,
Richard Kondo, Marc M. Rahme and Gregory K. Feld, UCSD; Celine Fiset,
Robert B. Clark and Wayne R. Giles, University of Calgary; and Steven
Kubalak, Lisa W. Norman and Robert G. Gourdie, Medical University of
South Carolina, Charleston. |