Arnold E. Pfahnl
Emory University
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Featured researches published by Arnold E. Pfahnl.
Circulation | 2007
Barry London; Michael Michalec; Haider Mehdi; Xiaodong Zhu; Laurie J. Kerchner; Shamarendra Sanyal; Prakash C. Viswanathan; Arnold E. Pfahnl; Lijuan L. Shang; Mohan Madhusudanan; Catherine J. Baty; Stephen M. Lagana; Ryan Aleong; Rebecca Gutmann; Michael J. Ackerman; Dennis M. McNamara; Raul Weiss; Samuel C. Dudley
Background— Brugada syndrome is a rare, autosomal-dominant, male-predominant form of idiopathic ventricular fibrillation characterized by a right bundle-branch block and ST elevation in the right precordial leads of the surface ECG. Mutations in the cardiac Na+ channel SCN5A on chromosome 3p21 cause ≈20% of the cases of Brugada syndrome; most mutations decrease inward Na+ current, some by preventing trafficking of the channels to the surface membrane. We previously used positional cloning to identify a new locus on chromosome 3p24 in a large family with Brugada syndrome and excluded SCN5A as a candidate gene. Methods and Results— We used direct sequencing to identify a mutation (A280V) in a conserved amino acid of the glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase 1–like (GPD1-L) gene. The mutation was present in all affected individuals and absent in >500 control subjects. GPD1-L RNA and protein are abundant in the heart. Compared with wild-type GPD1-L, coexpression of A280V GPD1-L with SCN5A in HEK cells reduced inward Na+ currents by ≈50% (P<0.005). Wild-type GPD1-L localized near the cell surface to a greater extent than A280V GPD1-L. Coexpression of A280V GPD1-L with SCN5A reduced SCN5A cell surface expression by 31±5% (P=0.01). Conclusions— GPD1-L is a novel gene that may affect trafficking of the cardiac Na+ channel to the cell surface. A GPD1-L mutation decreases SCN5A surface membrane expression, reduces inward Na+ current, and causes Brugada syndrome.
Circulation Research | 2007
Lijuan L. Shang; Arnold E. Pfahnl; Shamarendra Sanyal; Zhe Jiao; Jon Allen; Kathrin Banach; John P. Fahrenbach; Daiana Weiss; W. Robert Taylor; A. Maziar Zafari; Samuel C. Dudley
Heart failure (HF) is associated with reduced cardiac Na+ channel (SCN5A) current. We hypothesized that abnormal transcriptional regulation of this ion channel during HF could help explain the reduced current. Using human hearts explanted at the transplantation, we have identified 3 human C-terminal SCN5A mRNA splicing variants predicted to result in truncated, nonfunctional channels. As compared with normal hearts, the explanted ventricles showed an upregulation of 2 of the variants and a downregulation of the full-length mRNA transcript such that the E28A transcript represented only 48.5% (P<0.01) of the total SCN5A mRNA. This correlated with a 62.8% (P<0.01) reduction in Na+ channel protein. Lymphoblasts and skeletal muscle expressing SCN5A also showed identical C-terminal splicing variants. Variants showed reduced membrane protein and no functional current. Transfection of truncation variants into a cell line stably transfected with the full-length Na+ channel resulted in dose-dependent reductions in channel mRNA and current. Introduction of a premature truncation in the C-terminal region in a single allele of the mouse SCN5A resulted in embryonic lethality. Embryonic stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes expressing the construct showed reductions in Na+ channel-dependent electrophysiological parameters, suggesting that the presence of truncated Na+ channel mRNA at levels seen in HF is likely to be physiologically significant. In summary, chronic HF was associated with an increase in 2 truncated SCN5A variants and a decrease in the native mRNA. These splice variations may help explain a loss of Na+ channel protein and may contribute to the increased arrhythmic risk in clinical HF.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2006
Lijuan L. Shang; Samuel C. Dudley; Arnold E. Pfahnl
By directed differentiation using the hanging drop method, cardiomyocytes (CMs) can be derived from mouse embryonic stem cells. These spontaneously active CMs can then be isolated from the embryoid bodies and studied electrophysiologically for analysis of arrhythmic potential. This method is particularly advantangeous for studying CMs derived from genetically modified stem cells, in which mutations result in embryonic lethality.
American Journal of Physiology-cell Physiology | 2008
Lijuan L. Shang; Shamarendra Sanyal; Arnold E. Pfahnl; Zhe Jiao; Jon Allen; Hong Liu; Samuel C. Dudley
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004
Mari Yotsu-Yamashita; Yong H. Kim; Samuel C. Dudley; Gaurav Choudhary; Arnold E. Pfahnl; Yasukatsu Oshima; John W. Daly
Heart Rhythm | 2007
Arnold E. Pfahnl; Prakash C. Viswanathan; Raul Weiss; Lijuan L. Shang; Shamarendra Sanyal; Vladimir Shusterman; Cari Kornblit; Barry London; Samuel C. Dudley
Heart Rhythm | 2006
Barry London; Shamarendra Sanyal; Michael Michalec; Arnold E. Pfahnl; Lijuan L. Shang; Laurie Kerchner; Stephen Lagana; Ryan G. Aleong; Haider Mehdi; Rebecca Gutmann; Raul Weiss; Samuel C. Dudley
Archive | 2008
Hong Liu; Lijuan L. Shang; Arnold E. Pfahnl; Zhe Jiao; Jon Allen
Circulation | 2007
Shamarendra Sanyal; Arnold E. Pfahnl; Lijuan L. Shang; Shahriar Iravanian; Jon Allen; Barry London; Samuel C. Dudley
Circulation | 2006
Lijuan L. Shang; Arnold E. Pfahnl; Zhe Jiao; Kathrin Banach; John P. Fahrenbach; Tom Rossenbacker; Pieter A. Doevendans; Daiana Weiss; W R Taylor; Samuel C. Dudley