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Dive into the research topics where Annukka M. Lahtinen is active.

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Featured researches published by Annukka M. Lahtinen.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Cell Model of Catecholaminergic Polymorphic Ventricular Tachycardia Reveals Early and Delayed Afterdepolarizations

Kirsi Kujala; Jere Paavola; Anna Lahti; Kim Larsson; Mari Pekkanen-Mattila; Matti Viitasalo; Annukka M. Lahtinen; Lauri Toivonen; Kimmo Kontula; Heikki Swan; Mika Laine; Olli Silvennoinen; Katriina Aalto-Setälä

Background Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSC) provide means to study the pathophysiology of genetic disorders. Catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT) is a malignant inherited ion channel disorder predominantly caused by mutations in the cardiac ryanodine receptor (RyR2). In this study the cellular characteristics of CPVT are investigated and whether the electrophysiological features of this mutation can be mimicked using iPSC -derived cardiomyocytes (CM). Methodology/Principal Findings Spontaneously beating CMs were differentiated from iPSCs derived from a CPVT patient carrying a P2328S mutation in RyR2 and from two healthy controls. Calcium (Ca2+) cycling and electrophysiological properties were studied by Ca2+ imaging and patch-clamp techniques. Monophasic action potential (MAP) recordings and 24h-ECGs of CPVT-P2328S patients were analyzed for the presence of afterdepolarizations. We found defects in Ca2+ cycling and electrophysiology in CPVT CMs, reflecting the cardiac phenotype observed in the patients. Catecholaminergic stress led to abnormal Ca2+ signaling and induced arrhythmias in CPVT CMs. CPVT CMs also displayed reduced sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ content, indicating leakage of Ca2+ from the SR. Patch-clamp recordings of CPVT CMs revealed both delayed afterdepolarizations (DADs) during spontaneous beating and in response to adrenaline and also early afterdepolarizations (EADs) during spontaneous beating, recapitulating the changes seen in MAP and 24h-ECG recordings of patients carrying the same mutation. Conclusions/Significance This cell model shows aberrant Ca2+ cycling characteristic of CPVT and in addition to DADs it displays EADs. This cell model for CPVT provides a platform to study basic pathology, to screen drugs, and to optimize drug therapy.


Circulation-cardiovascular Genetics | 2013

Identification of a KCNQ1 Polymorphism Acting as a Protective Modifier against Arrhythmic Risk in Long QT Syndrome

Sabine Duchatelet; Lia Crotti; Rachel Peat; Isabelle Denjoy; Hideki Itoh; Myriam Berthet; Seiko Ohno; Véronique Fressart; Maria Cristina Monti; Cristina Crocamo; Matteo Pedrazzini; Federica Dagradi; Alessandro Vicentini; Didier Klug; Paul A. Brink; Althea Goosen; Heikki Swan; Lauri Toivonen; Annukka M. Lahtinen; Kimmo Kontula; Wataru Shimizu; Minoru Horie; Alfred L. George; David Tregouet; Pascale Guicheney; Peter J. Schwartz

Background—Long-QT syndrome (LQTS) is characterized by such striking clinical heterogeneity that, even among family members carrying the same mutation, clinical outcome can range between sudden death and no symptoms. We investigated the role of genetic variants as modifiers of risk for cardiac events in patients with LQTS. Methods and Results—In a matched case–control study including 112 patient duos with LQTS from France, Italy, and Japan, 25 polymorphisms were genotyped based on either their association with QTc duration in healthy populations or on their role in adrenergic responses. The duos were composed of 2 relatives harboring the same heterozygous KCNQ1 or KCNH2 mutation: 1 with cardiac events and 1 asymptomatic and untreated. The findings were then validated in 2 independent founder populations totaling 174 symptomatic and 162 asymptomatic patients with LQTS, and a meta-analysis was performed. The KCNQ1 rs2074238 T-allele was significantly associated with a decreased risk of symptoms 0.34 (0.19–0.61; P<0.0002) and with shorter QTc (P<0.0001) in the combined discovery and replication cohorts. Conclusions—We provide evidence that the KCNQ1 rs2074238 polymorphism is an independent risk modifier with the minor T-allele conferring protection against cardiac events in patients with LQTS. This finding is a step toward a novel approach for risk stratification in patients with LQTS.


Circulation-cardiovascular Genetics | 2011

Common Genetic Variants, QT Interval and Sudden Cardiac Death in a Finnish Population-Based Study

Peter A. Noseworthy; Aki S. Havulinna; Kimmo Porthan; Annukka M. Lahtinen; Antti Jula; Pekka J. Karhunen; Markus Perola; Lasse Oikarinen; Kimmo Kontula; Veikko Salomaa; Christopher Newton-Cheh

Background— Although sudden cardiac death (SCD) is heritable, its genetic underpinnings are poorly characterized. The QT interval appears to have a graded relationship to SCD, and 35% to 45% of its variation is heritable. We examined the relationship among recently reported common genetic variants, QT interval, and SCD. Methods and Results— We genotyped 15 common (minor allele frequency >1%) candidate single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), based on association with the QT interval in prior studies, in individuals in 2 cohort studies (Health 2000, n=6597; Mini-Finland, n=801). After exclusions, we identified 116 incident SCDs from the remaining sample (n=6808). We constructed a QT genotype score (QTscore) using the allele copy number and previously reported effect estimates for each SNP. Cox proportional hazards models adjusting for age, sex, and geographical area were used for time to SCD analyses. The QTscore was a continuous independent predictor of the heart rate–corrected QT interval (P<10−107). Comparing the top with the bottom quintile of QTscore, there was a 15.6-ms higher group mean QT interval (P<10−84). A 10-ms increase in the observed QT interval was associated with an increased risk of SCD (hazard ratio, 1.19; 95% confidence interval, 1.07 to 1.32; P=0.002). There was no linear relationship between QTscore and SCD risk; although in post hoc secondary analysis there was increased risk in the top compared with the middle QTscore quintile (hazard ratio, 1.92; 95% confidence interval, 1.05 to 3.58; P=0.04). Conclusions— Our study strongly replicates the relationship between common genetic variants and the QT interval and confirms the relationship between the QT interval and SCD but does not show evidence for a linear relationship between QTscore and SCD risk.


BMC Medical Genetics | 2009

Search for cardiac calcium cycling gene mutations in familial ventricular arrhythmias resembling catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia

Annukka Marjamaa; Päivi J. Laitinen-Forsblom; Annukka M. Lahtinen; Matti Viitasalo; Lauri Toivonen; Kimmo Kontula; Heikki Swan

BackgroundCatecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT) is a severe inherited cardiac disorder caused by mutations predominantly in the ryanodine receptor (RyR2) gene. We sought to identify mutations in genes affecting cardiac calcium cycling in patients with CPVT and in less typical familial exercise-related ventricular arrhythmias.Methods and ResultsWe recruited 33 consecutive patients with frequent ventricular premature complexes (VPCs) without structural heart disease and often history of syncope or sudden death in family. Sixteen of the patients featured a phenotype typical of CPVT. In 17 patients, VPCs emerged also at rest. Exercise stress test and echocardiography were performed to each patient and 232 family members. Familial background was evident in 42% of cases (n = 14). We sequenced all the coding exons of the RyR2, FKBP1B, ATP2A2 and SLC8A1 genes from the index patients. Single channel recordings of a mutant RyR2 were performed in planar lipid bilayers. Two novel RyR2 missense mutations (R1051P and S616L) and two RyR2 exon 3 deletions were identified, explaining 25% of the CPVT phenotypes. A rare variant (N3308S) with open probabilities similar to the wild type channels in vitro, was evident in a patient with resting VPCs. No disease-causing variants were detectable in the FKBP1B, ATP2A2 or SLC8A1 genes.ConclusionWe report two novel CPVT-causing RyR2 mutations and a novel RyR2 variant of uncertain clinical significance in a patient with abundant resting VPCs. Our data also strengthen the previous assumption that exon 3 deletions of RyR2 should screened for in CPVT and related phenotypes.


Heart Rhythm | 2011

Population-prevalent desmosomal mutations predisposing to arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy

Annukka M. Lahtinen; Eero Lehtonen; Annukka Marjamaa; Maija Kaartinen; Tiina Heliö; Kimmo Porthan; Lasse Oikarinen; Lauri Toivonen; Heikki Swan; Antti Jula; Leena Peltonen; Aarno Palotie; Veikko Salomaa; Kimmo Kontula

BACKGROUND Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) is a progressive myocardial disorder caused by mutations of desmosomal cell adhesion proteins. The prevalence of these variants in the general population is unknown. OBJECTIVE This study examined the spectrum and population prevalence of desmosomal mutations predisposing to ARVC in Finland. METHODS We screened 29 Finnish ARVC probands for mutations in the DSP, DSG2, and DSC2 genes. All Finnish-type ARVC-associated mutations, including those 3 previously identified in PKP2 in the same patient group, were analyzed in the population-based Health 2000 cohort of 6,334 individuals and tested for association with electrocardiographic variables. RESULTS We detected 2 novel mutations: DSG2 3059_3062delAGAG and DSP T1373A. DSG2 3059_3062delAGAG was present in a family with 5 mutation carriers. The endomyocardial samples of the DSG2 deletion carrier showed reduced immunoreactive signal for desmoglein-2, plakophilin-2, plakoglobin, and desmoplakin. DSP T1373A was found in 1 proband with typical right ventricular disease and exercise-related ventricular tachycardia. In the population sample, the collective prevalence of all 5 mutations identified in the 29 ARVC patients (PKP2 Q62K, Q59L, N613K, DSG2 3059_3062delAGAG, and DSP T1373A) was 31 of 6,334 individuals, or 0.5%. The apparent founder mutation PKP2 Q59L is present in 0.3% of Finns and was previously shown to have an approximately 20% disease penetrance. CONCLUSION One of 200 Finns carries a desmosomal mutation that may predispose to ARVC and its clinical sequelae. ARVC-associated mutations may thus be more prevalent in the population than expected based on the published ARVC prevalence data.


Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology | 2012

Intravenous epinephrine infusion test in diagnosis of catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia.

Annukka Marjamaa; Anita Hiippala; Bianca Arrhenius; Annukka M. Lahtinen; Kimmo Kontula; Lauri Toivonen; Juha-Matti Happonen; Heikki Swan

Epinephrine Infusion in Diagnosis of CPVT. Introduction: A test involving intravenous infusion of epinephrine has been proposed as a method alternative to exercise stress test in diagnosis of catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT). We aimed at estimating the predictive value of intravenous epinephrine administration in CPVT patients with frequent exercise‐induced ventricular ectopy.


BMC Medical Genetics | 2011

KCNE1 D85N polymorphism--a sex-specific modifier in type 1 long QT syndrome?

Annukka M. Lahtinen; Annukka Marjamaa; Heikki Swan; Kimmo Kontula

BackgroundLong QT syndrome (LQTS) is an inherited ion channel disorder manifesting with prolongation of the cardiac repolarization phase and severe ventricular arrhythmias. The common KCNE1 D85N potassium channel variant prolongs QT interval by inhibiting IKs (KCNQ1) and IKr (KCNH2) currents and is therefore a suitable candidate for a modifier gene in LQTS.MethodsWe studied the effect of D85N on age-, sex-, and heart rate-adjusted QT-interval duration by linear regression in LQTS patients carrying the Finnish founder mutations KCNQ1 G589D (n = 492), KCNQ1 IVS7-2A>G (n = 66), KCNH2 L552S (n = 73), and KCNH2 R176W (n = 88). We also investigated the association between D85N and clinical variables reflecting the severity of the disease.ResultsD85N was associated with a QT prolongation by 26 ms (SE 8.6, p = 0.003) in males with KCNQ1 G589D (n = 213), but not in females with G589D (n = 279). In linear regression, the interaction between D85N genotype and sex was significant (p = 0.028). Within the KCNQ1 G589D mutation group, KCNE1 D85N carriers were more often probands of the family (p = 0.042) and were more likely to use beta blocker medication (p = 0.010) than non-carriers. The number of D85N carriers in other founder mutation groups was too small to assess its effects.ConclusionsWe propose that KCNE1 D85N is a sex-specific QT-interval modifier in type 1 LQTS and may also associate with increased severity of disease. Our data warrant additional studies on the role of KCNE1 D85N in other genetically homogeneous groups of LQTS patients.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Antiarrhythmic Effects of Dantrolene in Patients with Catecholaminergic Polymorphic Ventricular Tachycardia and Replication of the Responses Using iPSC Models

Kirsi Penttinen; Heikki Swan; Sari U. M. Vanninen; Jere Paavola; Annukka M. Lahtinen; Kimmo Kontula; Katriina Aalto-Setälä

Catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT) is a highly malignant inherited arrhythmogenic disorder. Type 1 CPVT (CPVT1) is caused by cardiac ryanodine receptor (RyR2) gene mutations resulting in abnormal calcium release from sarcoplasmic reticulum. Dantrolene, an inhibitor of sarcoplasmic Ca2+ release, has been shown to rescue this abnormal Ca2+ release in vitro. We assessed the antiarrhythmic efficacy of dantrolene in six patients carrying various RyR2 mutations causing CPVT. The patients underwent exercise stress test before and after dantrolene infusion. Dantrolene reduced the number of premature ventricular complexes (PVCs) on average by 74% (range 33-97) in four patients with N-terminal or central mutations in the cytosolic region of the RyR2 protein, while dantrolene had no effect in two patients with mutations in or near the transmembrane domain. Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) were generated from all the patients and differentiated into spontaneously beating cardiomyocytes (CMs). The antiarrhythmic effect of dantrolene was studied in CMs after adrenaline stimulation by Ca2+ imaging. In iPSC derived CMs with RyR2 mutations in the N-terminal or central region, dantrolene suppressed the Ca2+ cycling abnormalities in 80% (range 65-97) of cells while with mutations in or near the transmembrane domain only in 23 or 32% of cells. In conclusion, we demonstrate that dantrolene given intravenously shows antiarrhythmic effects in a portion of CPVT1 patients and that iPSC derived CM models replicate these individual drug responses. These findings illustrate the potential of iPSC models to individualize drug therapy of inherited diseases. Trial Registration EudraCT Clinical Trial Registry 2012-005292-14


Circulation-cardiovascular Genetics | 2014

Gain-of-function mutation of the SCN5A gene causes exercise-induced polymorphic ventricular arrhythmias.

Heikki Swan; Mohamed Yassine Amarouch; Jaakko Leinonen; Annukka Marjamaa; Jan P. Kucera; Päivi J. Laitinen-Forsblom; Annukka M. Lahtinen; Aarno Palotie; Kimmo Kontula; Lauri Toivonen; Hugues Abriel; Elisabeth Widen

Background—Over the past 15 years, a myriad of mutations in genes encoding cardiac ion channels and ion channel interacting proteins have been linked to a long list of inherited atrial and ventricular arrhythmias. The purpose of this study was to identify the genetic and functional determinants underlying exercise-induced polymorphic ventricular arrhythmia present in a large multigenerational family. Methods and Results—A large 4-generation family presenting with exercise-induced polymorphic ventricular arrhythmia, which was followed for 10 years, was clinically characterized. A novel SCN5A mutation was identified via whole exome sequencing and further functionally evaluated by patch-clamp studies using human embryonic kidney 293 cells. Of 37 living family members, a total of 13 individuals demonstrated ≥50 multiformic premature ventricular complexes or ventricular tachycardia upon exercise stress tests when sinus rate exceeded 99±17 beats per minute. Sudden cardiac arrest occurred in 1 individual during follow-up. Exome sequencing identified a novel missense mutation (p.I141V) in a highly conserved region of the SCN5A gene, encoding the Nav1.5 sodium channel protein that cosegregated with the arrhythmia phenotype. The mutation p.I141V shifted the activation curve toward more negative potentials and increased the window current, whereas action potential simulations suggested that it lowered the excitability threshold of cardiac cells. Conclusions—Gain-of-function of Nav1.5 may cause familial forms of exercise-induced polymorphic ventricular arrhythmias.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Common Genetic Variants Associated with Sudden Cardiac Death: The FinSCDgen Study

Annukka M. Lahtinen; Peter A. Noseworthy; Aki S. Havulinna; Antti Jula; Pekka J. Karhunen; Johannes Kettunen; Markus Perola; Kimmo Kontula; Christopher Newton-Cheh; Veikko Salomaa

Background Sudden cardiac death (SCD) accounts for up to half of cardiac mortality. The risk of SCD is heritable but the underlying genetic variants are largely unknown. We investigated whether common genetic variants predisposing to arrhythmia or related electrocardiographic phenotypes, including QT-interval prolongation, are associated with increased risk of SCD. Methodology/Principal Findings We studied the association between 28 candidate SNPs and SCD in a meta-analysis of four population cohorts (FINRISK 1992, 1997, 2002 and Health 2000, n = 27,629) and two forensic autopsy series (The Helsinki Sudden Death Study and The Tampere Autopsy Study, n = 694). We also studied the association between established cardiovascular risk factors and SCD. Causes of death were reviewed using registry-based health and autopsy data. Cox regression and logistic regression models were adjusted for age, sex, and geographic region. The total number of SCDs was 716. Two novel SNPs were associated with SCD: SCN5A rs41312391 (relative risk [RR] 1.27 per minor T allele, 95% CI 1.11–1.45, P = 3.4×10−4) and rs2200733 in 4q25 (RR 1.28 per minor T allele, 95% CI 1.11–1.48, P = 7.9×10−4). We also replicated the associations for 9p21 (rs2383207, RR 1.13 per G allele, 95% CI 1.01–1.26, P = 0.036), as well as for male sex, systolic blood pressure, diabetes, cigarette smoking, low physical activity, coronary heart disease, and digoxin use (P<0.05). Conclusions/Significance Two novel genetic variants, one in the cardiac sodium channel gene SCN5A and another at 4q25 previously associated with atrial fibrillation, are associated with SCD.

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Heikki Swan

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Lauri Toivonen

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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