Clinically severe RyR2 mutations alter interdomain interactions and cause abnormal Ca2+ release after channel activation, exhibiting threshold characteristics (caffeine >2.5 mmol/L; Ca2+ >150 nmol/L).
SCD-linked RyR2 mutations cause abnormal Ca2+ release through altered interdomain interactions and conformational instability following channel activation.
Arrhythmogenic cardiac ryanodine receptor (RyR2) mutations are associated with stress-induced malignant tachycardia, frequently leading to sudden cardiac death (SCD). The causative mechanisms of RyR2 Ca2+ release dysregulation are complex and remain controversial. We investigated the functional impact of clinically-severe RyR2 mutations occurring in the central domain, and the C-terminal I domain, a key locus of RyR2 autoregulation, on interdomain interactions and Ca2+ release in living cells. Using high-resolution confocal microscopy and fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) analysis of interaction between fusion proteins corresponding to amino- (N-) and carboxyl- (C-) terminal RyR2 domains, we determined that in resting cells, RyR2 interdomain interaction remained unaltered after introduction of SCD-linked mutations and normal Ca2+ regulation was maintained. In contrast, after channel activation, the abnormal Ca2+ release via mutant RyR2 was intrinsically linked to altered interdomain interaction that was equivalent with all mutations and exhibited threshold characteristics (caffeine >2.5 mmol/L; Ca2+ >150 nmol/L). Noise analysis revealed that I domain mutations introduced a distinct pattern of conformational instability in Ca2+ handling and interdomain interaction after channel activation that was absent in signals obtained from the central domain mutation. I domain-linked channel instability also occurred in intact RyR2 expressed in CHO cells and in HL-1 cardiomyocytes. These new insights highlight a critical role for mutation-linked defects in channel autoregulation, and may contribute to a molecular explanation for the augmented Ca2+ release following RyR2 channel activation. Our findings also suggest that the mutational locus may be an important mechanistic determinant of Ca2+ release channel dysfunction in arrhythmia and SCD.
George et al. (Fri,) conducted a other in Arrhythmogenic cardiac ryanodine receptor (RyR2) mutations. RyR2 mutations (central domain and C-terminal I domain) vs. Wild-type/normal RyR2 was evaluated on Interdomain interactions and Ca2+ release. Clinically severe RyR2 mutations alter interdomain interactions and cause abnormal Ca2+ release after channel activation, exhibiting threshold characteristics (caffeine >2.5 mmol/L; Ca2+ >150 nmol/L).