Circ Res 2002 Aug 9;91(3):218-25 Enhanced basal activity of a cardiac Ca2+ release channel (ryanodine receptor) mutant associated with ventricular tachycardia and sudden death.
Mutations in the human cardiac Ca2+ release channel (ryanodine receptor, RyR2) gene have recently been shown to cause effort-induced ventricular arrhythmias. However, the consequences of these disease-causing mutations in RyR2 channel function are unknown. In the present study, we characterized the properties of mutation R4496C of mouse RyR2 , which is equivalent to a disease-causing human RyR2 mutation R4497C, by heterologous expression of the mutant in HEK293 cells. [3H]ryanodine binding studies revealed that the R4496C mutation resulted in an increase in RyR2 channel activity in particular at low Ca2+ concentrations. This increased basal channel activity remained sensitive to modulation by caffeine, ATP, Mg2+, and ruthenium red. In addition, the R4496C mutation enhanced the sensitivity of RyR2 to activation by Ca2+ and by caffeine. Single-channel analysis showed that single R4496C mutant channels exhibited considerable channel openings at low Ca2+ concentrations. HEK293 cells transfected with mutant R4496C displayed spontaneous Ca2+ oscillations more frequently than cells transfected with wild-type RyR2. Substitution of a negatively charged glutamate for the positively charged R4496 (R4496E) further enhanced the basal channel activity, whereas replacement of R4496 by a positively charged lysine (R4496K) had no significant effect on the basal activity. These observations indicate that the charge and polarity at residue 4496 plays an essential role in RyR2 channel gating. Enhanced basal activity of RyR2 may underlie an arrhythmogenic mechanism for effort-induced ventricular tachycardia.
Am Heart J 2002 Aug;144(2):351-8 Cardiac troponin I: a potential marker of exercise intolerance in patients with moderate heart failure.
BACKGROUND: In severe heart failure, increased values of cardiac troponins have been detected during decompensation. In this study, we investigated whether an increase of cardiac troponin I can be observed after symptom-limited exercise and after an exercise training session in patients with moderate heart failure. METHODS: Twenty-seven patients with moderate heart failure (New York Heart Association II-III, ejection fraction 31% +/- 8%) were compared with 9 patients with mild heart failure and 10 subjects without heart failure. They underwent a symptom-limited exercise test and a bicycle exercise training session at >80% of maximal heart rate over 20 to 30 minutes. Plasma cTnI levels were measured at baseline, after symptom-limited exercise (hourly for 5 hours), and after training (4 and 10 hours). RESULTS: Patients with moderate heart failure showed an increase of cTnI from 37 +/- 49 pg/mL to 73 +/- 59 pg/mL (P <.001) after symptom-limited exercise. Four patients with moderate and 1 with mild heart failure and normal cTnI values at rest showed an increase of cTnI above 100 pg/mL after acute exercise but not after training. Subjects without heart failure had lower cTnI levels at rest and significantly lower values after symptom-limited exercise and training (P <.05 for each). CONCLUSION: Patients with symptomatic heart failure reveal an increase of cTnI after symptom-limited exercise at levels that indicate minor myocardial damage. The prognostic impact of this finding should, therefore, be further investigated.