1. Academic Validation
  2. Absence of triadin, a protein of the calcium release complex, is responsible for cardiac arrhythmia with sudden death in human

Absence of triadin, a protein of the calcium release complex, is responsible for cardiac arrhythmia with sudden death in human

  • Hum Mol Genet. 2012 Jun 15;21(12):2759-67. doi: 10.1093/hmg/dds104.
Nathalie Roux-Buisson 1 Marine Cacheux Anne Fourest-Lieuvin Jeremy Fauconnier Julie Brocard Isabelle Denjoy Philippe Durand Pascale Guicheney Florence Kyndt Antoine Leenhardt Hervé Le Marec Vincent Lucet Philippe Mabo Vincent Probst Nicole Monnier Pierre F Ray Elodie Santoni Pauline Trémeaux Alain Lacampagne Julien Fauré Joël Lunardi Isabelle Marty
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 INSERM U836, Grenoble Institut des Neurosciences, Equipe Muscle et Pathologies, Grenoble, France.
Abstract

Catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT) is an inherited arrhythmogenic disease so far related to mutations in the cardiac ryanodine receptor (RYR2) or the cardiac calsequestrin (CASQ2) genes. Because mutations in RYR2 or in CASQ2 are not retrieved in all CPVT cases, we searched for mutations in the physiological protein partners of RyR2 and CSQ2 in a large cohort of CPVT patients with no detected mutation in these two genes. Based on a candidate gene approach, we focused our investigations on triadin and junctin, two proteins that link RyR2 and CSQ2. Mutations in the triadin (TRDN) and in the junctin (ASPH) genes were searched in a cohort of 97 CPVT patients. We identified three mutations in triadin which cosegregated with the disease on a recessive mode of transmission in two families, but no mutation was found in junctin. Two TRDN mutations, a 4 bp deletion and a nonsense mutation, resulted in premature stop codons; the third mutation, a p.T59R missense mutation, was further studied. Expression of the p.T59R mutant in COS-7 cells resulted in intracellular retention and degradation of the mutant protein. This was confirmed after in vivo expression of the mutant triadin in triadin knock-out mice by viral transduction. In this work, we identified TRDN as a new gene responsible for an autosomal recessive form of CPVT. The mutations identified in the two families lead to the absence of the protein, thereby demonstrating the importance of triadin for the normal function of the cardiac calcium release complex in humans.

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