Islamabad, Jan 1: The biologic and genetic
mechanisms controlling the formation and function of the CCS are not well
understood, but new research with mice shows that altered function of a gene
called Tbx3 interferes with the development of the CCS and causes lethal
arrhythmia.
Arrhythmia is a potentially life-threatening problem with the
rate or rhythm of the heartbeat, causing it to go too fast, too slow or to beat
irregularly. Arrhythmia affects millions of people worldwide.
The cardiac
conduction system (CCS) regulates the rate and rhythm of the heart. It is a
group of specialized cells in the walls of the heart. These cells control the
heart rate by sending electrical signals from the sinoatrial node in the heart's
right atrium (upper chamber) to the ventricles (lower chambers), causing them to
contract and pump blood.
The biologic and genetic mechanisms controlling
the formation and function of the CCS are not well understood, but new research
with mice shows that altered function of a gene called Tbx3 interferes with the
development of the CCS and causes lethal arrhythmia.
In a study published
in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences early edition,
researchers led by the University of Utah showed the CCS is extremely sensitive
to levels of Tbx3. Mouse embryos with Tbx3 levels below a critical threshold
suffered arrhythmia and couldn't survive. As the levels of Tbx3 were increased,
mice survived to birth, but as adults they developed arrhythmias or had sudden
death.
Tbx3 dysfunction merits further investigation as a cause of
acquired and spontaneous arrhythmias, says Anne M. Moon, M.D., Ph.D., adjunct
professor of pediatrics at the U of U School of Medicine and corresponding
author on the study. "The cardiac conduction system is very sensitive to Tbx3,"
Moon says. "Tbx3 is required for the conduction system to develop, mature, and
then continue to function properly."
The Tbx3 protein, which is a
transcription factor encoded by the TBX3 gene, has been linked to heart
development, but its role is not yet clearly defined. Moon and her colleagues,
including first author Deborah U. Frank, M.D., Ph.D., U assistant professor of
pediatrics, found that slight alterations in the structure of the Tbx3 gene
alter the level of the protein in mice. When this happens, it can impair the
electrical signal in the sinoatrial node and block the atrioventricular node,
which conducts electrical signals from the atria to the ventricles. The result
is lethal arrhythmias in embryonic and adult mice.
This discovery has
implications for the potential to regenerate functional heart tissue, according
to Moon. "There's a big effort to regenerate heart muscle," she says. "But if
the muscle can't conduct electrical signals, it's not going to do any good; we
also need to be able to regenerate conduction tissues to regulate that
muscle."
Arrhythmia is not the first problem related to mutations in the TBX3
gene. In humans, TBX3 mutations have been shown to cause limb malformations in
people with ulnar-mammary syndrome, an inherited birth disorder characterized by
abnormalities of the bones in the hands and forearms and underdeveloped sweat
and mammary glands.
In her future research, Moon wants to discover
specifically how Tbx3 regulates the behavior of cells in the cardiac conduction
system and whether cells that don't have enough Tbx3 die or turn into some other
kind of cells.
"It turns out that Tbx3 is a lot more important in the
heart than we realized," Moon says.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Mutation in gene that's critical for human development linked to arrhythmia
Mutation in gene that's critical for human development linked to arrhythmia
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