SCN10A-short gene therapy reduced the incidence of ischemia-reperfusion induced ventricular tachycardia to 44.4% compared to 81.0% in control mice.
Does SCN10A-short gene therapy improve cardiac sodium current and prevent arrhythmias in Scn5a-haploinsufficient and wild type models?
Wild type and Scn5a-haploinsufficient (Scn5a+/Δ7bp) mice, human inducible pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs), and simulated human heart models.
Adeno-associated viral (AAV) vector overexpressing SCN10A-short (S10s) (AAV6-S10s or AAV9-S10s) via intramyocardial or intravenous injection.
Control AAV vector expressing GFP alone (AAV6-GFP or AAV9-GFP).
Cellular sodium current (INa) density and maximal action potential upstroke velocity (dV/dtmax).surrogate
SCN10A-short gene therapy successfully restores cardiac sodium current and conduction velocity, offering a potential novel treatment for arrhythmias associated with SCN5A haploinsufficiency.
Estimación del efecto: OR 5.31 (95% CI 1.27-18.3)
Tasa de eventos absoluta: 44.4% vs 81%
valor p: p=0.024
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Life-threatening arrhythmias are a well-established consequence of reduced cardiac sodium current (INa). Gene therapy approaches to increase INa have demonstrated potential benefits to prevent arrhythmias. However, the development of such therapies is hampered by the large size of sodium channels. In this study, SCN10A-short (S10s), a short transcript encoding the carboxy-terminal domain of the human neuronal sodium channel, was evaluated as a gene therapy target to increase INa and prevent arrhythmias. METHODS: Adeno-associated viral vector overexpressing S10s was injected into wild type and Scn5a-haploinsufficient mice on which patch-clamp studies, optical mapping, electrocardiogram analyses, and ischaemia reperfusion were performed. In vitro and in silico studies were conducted to further explore the effect of S10s gene therapy in the context of human hearts. RESULTS: Cardiac S10s overexpression increased cellular INa, maximal action potential upstroke velocity, and action potential amplitude in Scn5a-haploinsufficient cardiomyocytes. S10s gene therapy rescues conduction slowing in Scn5a-haploinsufficient mice and prevented ventricular tachycardia induced by ischaemia-reperfusion in wild type mice. S10s overexpression increased maximal action potential upstroke velocity in human inducible pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes and prevented inducible arrhythmias in simulated human heart models. CONCLUSIONS: S10s gene therapy may be effective to treat cardiac conduction abnormalities and associated arrhythmias.
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Jianan Wang
Ningbo No. 2 Hospital
Arie O. Verkerk
Electrophysiology
Ronald Wilders
Amsterdam University Medical Centers
European Heart Journal
Johns Hopkins University
University of Amsterdam
Maastricht University
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Wang et al. (Thu,) conducted a other in Cardiac arrhythmias and conduction abnormalities. SCN10A-short (S10s) gene therapy vs. Control vectors (AAV9-GFP or AAV9-MCS) was evaluated on Ventricular tachycardia incidence following ischemia-reperfusion injury (OR 5.31, 95% CI 1.27-18.3, p=0.024). SCN10A-short gene therapy reduced the incidence of ischemia-reperfusion induced ventricular tachycardia to 44.4% compared to 81.0% in control mice.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a15c22ca2352da34782dfdf — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehaf053
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