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Cardiovascular consequences of KATP overactivity in Cantu syndrome
Yan Huang, Conor McClenaghan, Theresa M. Harter, Kristina Hinman, Carmen M. Halabi, Scot J. Matkovich, Haixia Zhang, G. Schuyler Brown, Robert P. Mecham, Sarah K. England, Attila Kovacs, Maria S. Remedi, Colin G. Nichols
Yan Huang, Conor McClenaghan, Theresa M. Harter, Kristina Hinman, Carmen M. Halabi, Scot J. Matkovich, Haixia Zhang, G. Schuyler Brown, Robert P. Mecham, Sarah K. England, Attila Kovacs, Maria S. Remedi, Colin G. Nichols
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Research Article Cardiology

Cardiovascular consequences of KATP overactivity in Cantu syndrome

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Abstract

Cantu syndrome (CS) is characterized by multiple vascular and cardiac abnormalities including vascular dilation and tortuosity, systemic hypotension, and cardiomegaly. The disorder is caused by gain-of-function (GOF) mutations in genes encoding pore-forming (Kir6.1, KCNJ8) and accessory (SUR2, ABCC9) ATP-sensitive potassium (KATP) channel subunits. However, there is little understanding of the link between molecular dysfunction and the complex pathophysiology observed, and there is no known treatment, in large part due to the lack of appropriate preclinical disease models in which to test therapies. Notably, expression of Kir6.1 and SUR2 does not fully overlap, and the relative contribution of KATP GOF in various cardiovascular tissues remains to be elucidated. To investigate pathophysiologic mechanisms in CS we have used CRISPR/Cas9 engineering to introduce CS-associated SUR2[A478V] and Kir6.1[V65M] mutations to the equivalent endogenous loci in mice. Mirroring human CS, both of these animals exhibit low systemic blood pressure and dilated, compliant blood vessels, as well dramatic cardiac enlargement, the effects being more severe in V65M animals than in A478V animals. In both animals, whole-cell patch-clamp recordings reveal enhanced basal KATP conductance in vascular smooth muscle, explaining vasodilation and lower blood pressure, and demonstrating a cardinal role for smooth muscle KATP dysfunction in CS etiology. Echocardiography confirms in situ cardiac enlargement and increased cardiac output in both animals. Patch-clamp recordings reveal reduced ATP sensitivity of ventricular myocyte KATP channels in A478V, but normal ATP sensitivity in V65M, suggesting that cardiac remodeling occurs secondary to KATP overactivity outside of the heart. These SUR2[A478V] and Kir6.1[V65M] animals thus reiterate the key cardiovascular features seen in human CS. They establish the molecular basis of the pathophysiological consequences of reduced smooth muscle excitability resulting from SUR2/Kir6.1–dependent KATP GOF, and provide a validated animal model in which to examine potential therapeutic approaches to treating CS.

Authors

Yan Huang, Conor McClenaghan, Theresa M. Harter, Kristina Hinman, Carmen M. Halabi, Scot J. Matkovich, Haixia Zhang, G. Schuyler Brown, Robert P. Mecham, Sarah K. England, Attila Kovacs, Maria S. Remedi, Colin G. Nichols

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Figure 2

Smooth muscle KATP channels in Kir6.1wt/VM and SUR2wt/AV mice.

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Smooth muscle KATP channels in Kir6.1wt/VM and SUR2wt/AV mice.
(A) Repre...
(A) Representative whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings from acutely isolated aortic smooth muscle cells from WT (top) and Kir6.1wt/VM (bottom) mice. Cells were voltage clamped at –70 mV. (B) Representative whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings from Kir6.1wt/VM aortic smooth muscle cells using an intracellular pipette solution containing 5 mM ATP. (C) Summary of whole-cell current densities from voltage-clamp recordings of Kir6.1wt/VM aortic smooth muscle cells showing significant increases in basal and pinacidil-activated KATP conductances, which are resistant to glibenclamide inhibition (n ≥ 5 for WT and 11 for Kir6.1wt/VM from ≥ 3 mice each). (D) Representative whole-cell voltage-clamp recordings from acutely isolated aortic smooth muscle cells from WT (left, black), heterozygous SUR2wt/AV (middle, orange), and homozygous SUR2AV/AV (right, red) mice using an intracellular pipette solution absent of nucleotides (–70 mV holding potential). (E) Left: Summary of whole-cell current densities from voltage-clamp recordings of aortic smooth muscle cells from WT, SUR2wt/AV, and SUR2AV/AV mice showing significant increases in basal and pinacidil-activated KATP conductances (n ≥ 8 for WT, 11 for SUR2wt/AV, and 14 for SUR2AV/AV from ≥ 3 mice each). Right: Summary of experiments in which 5 mM ATP was included in the patch pipette shown for WT and SURAV/AV cells. Statistical significance was determined by multiway ANOVA followed by t test pairwise comparison with Bonferroni’s correction for multiple comparisons. Adjusted α = 0.008 (C) and 0.003 (E). **P < 0.01.

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