Kanae Hasegawa
University of Fukui
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Featured researches published by Kanae Hasegawa.
Nature Genetics | 2013
Connie R. Bezzina; Julien Barc; Yuka Mizusawa; Carol Ann Remme; Jean-Baptiste Gourraud; Floriane Simonet; Arie O. Verkerk; Peter J. Schwartz; Lia Crotti; Federica Dagradi; Pascale Guicheney; Véronique Fressart; Antoine Leenhardt; Charles Antzelevitch; Susan Bartkowiak; Martin Borggrefe; Rainer Schimpf; Eric Schulze-Bahr; Sven Zumhagen; Elijah R. Behr; Rachel Bastiaenen; Jacob Tfelt-Hansen; Morten S. Olesen; Stefan Kääb; Britt M. Beckmann; Peter Weeke; Hiroshi Watanabe; Naoto Endo; Tohru Minamino; Minoru Horie
Brugada syndrome is a rare cardiac arrhythmia disorder, causally related to SCN5A mutations in around 20% of cases. Through a genome-wide association study of 312 individuals with Brugada syndrome and 1,115 controls, we detected 2 significant association signals at the SCN10A locus (rs10428132) and near the HEY2 gene (rs9388451). Independent replication confirmed both signals (meta-analyses: rs10428132, P = 1.0 × 10−68; rs9388451, P = 5.1 × 10−17) and identified one additional signal in SCN5A (at 3p21; rs11708996, P = 1.0 × 10−14). The cumulative effect of the three loci on disease susceptibility was unexpectedly large (Ptrend = 6.1 × 10−81). The association signals at SCN5A-SCN10A demonstrate that genetic polymorphisms modulating cardiac conduction can also influence susceptibility to cardiac arrhythmia. The implication of association with HEY2, supported by new evidence that Hey2 regulates cardiac electrical activity, shows that Brugada syndrome may originate from altered transcriptional programming during cardiac development. Altogether, our findings indicate that common genetic variation can have a strong impact on the predisposition to rare diseases.
Circulation-arrhythmia and Electrophysiology | 2014
Yoshiaki Kaneko; Minoru Horie; Shinichi Niwano; Kengo Kusano; Seiji Takatsuki; Takashi Kurita; Takeshi Mitsuhashi; Tadashi Nakajima; Tadanobu Irie; Kanae Hasegawa; Takashi Noda; Shiro Kamakura; Yoshiyasu Aizawa; Ryobun Yasuoka; Katsumi Torigoe; Hiroshi Suzuki; Toru Ohe; Akihiko Shimizu; Keiichi Fukuda; Masahiko Kurabayashi; Yoshifusa Aizawa
Background—Electrical storms (ESs) in patients with Brugada syndrome (BrS) are rare though potentially lethal. Methods and Results—We studied 22 men with BrS and ES, defined as ≥3 episodes/d of ventricular fibrillation (VF) and compared their characteristics with those of 110 age-matched, control men with BrS without ES. BrS was diagnosed by a spontaneous or drug-induced type 1 pattern on the ECG in the absence of structural heart disease. Early repolarization (ER) was diagnosed by J waves, ie, >0.1 mV notches or slurs of the terminal portion of the QRS complex. The BrS ECG pattern was provoked with pilsicainide. A spontaneous type I ECG pattern, J waves, and horizontal/descending ST elevation were found, respectively, in 77%, 36%, and 88% of patients with ES, versus 28% (P<0.0001), 9% (P=0.003), and 60% (P=0.06) of controls. The J-wave amplitude was significantly higher in patients with than without ES (P=0.03). VF occurred during undisturbed sinus rhythm in 14 of 19 patients (74%), and ES were controlled by isoproterenol administration. All patients with ES received an implantable cardioverter defibrillator and over a 6.0±5.4 years follow-up, the prognosis of patients with ES was significantly worse than that of patients without ES. Bepridil was effective in preventing VF in 6 patients. Conclusions—A high prevalence of ER was found in a subgroup of patients with BrS associated with ES. ES appeared to be suppressed by isoproterenol or quinidine, whereas bepridil and quinidine were effective in the long-term prevention of VF in the highest-risk patients.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2013
Yoshifusa Aizawa; Masaomi Chinushi; Kanae Hasegawa; Nobu Naiki; Minoru Horie; Yoshiaki Kaneko; Masahiko Kurabayashi; Shogo Ito; Tsutomu Imaizumi; Yoshiyasu Aizawa; Seiji Takatsuki; Kunitake Joo; Masahito Sato; Katsuya Ebe; Yukio Hosaka; Michel Haïssaguerre; Keiichi Fukuda
OBJECTIVES This study sought to characterize patients with idiopathic ventricular fibrillation (IVF) who develop electrical storms. BACKGROUND Some IVF patients develop ventricular fibrillation (VF) storms, but the characteristics of these patients are poorly known. METHODS Ninety-one IVF patients (86% male) were selected after the exclusion of structural heart diseases, primary electrical diseases, and coronary spasm. Electrocardiogram features were compared between the patients with and without electrical storms. A VF storm was defined as VF occurring ≥3 times in 24 h and J waves >0.1 mV above the isoelectric line in contiguous leads. RESULTS Fourteen (15.4%) patients had VF storms occurring out-of-hospital at night or in the early morning. J waves were more closely associated with VF storms compared to patients without VF storms: 92.9% versus 36.4% (p < 0.0001). VF storms were controlled by intravenous isoproterenol, which attenuated the J-wave amplitude. After the subsidence of VF storms, the J waves decreased to the nondiagnostic level during the entire follow-up period. Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator therapy was administered to all patients during follow-up. Quinidine therapy was limited, but the patients on disopyramide (n = 3), bepridil (n = 1), or isoprenaline (n = 1) were free from VF recurrence, while VF recurred in 5 of the 9 patients who were not given antiarrhythmic drugs. CONCLUSIONS The VF storms in the IVF patients were highly associated with J waves that showed augmentation prior to the VF onset. Isoproterenol was effective in controlling VF and attenuated the J waves, which diminished to below the diagnostic level during follow-up. VF recurred in patients followed up without antiarrhythmic agents.
Journal of Cardiovascular Electrophysiology | 2014
Qi Wang; Seiko Ohno; Wei-Guang Ding; Megumi Fukuyama; Akashi Miyamoto; Hideki Itoh; Takeru Makiyama; Jie Wu; Jia-Yu Bai; Kanae Hasegawa; Tetsuji Shinohara; Naohiko Takahashi; Akihiko Shimizu; Hiroshi Matsuura; Minoru Horie
Brugada syndrome (BrS) is an inherited disease characterized by right precordial ST segment elevation on electrocardiograms (ECGs) that predisposes patients to sudden cardiac death as a result of polymorphic ventricular tachyarrhythmia or ventricular fibrillation (VF). In BrS patients, except for SCN5A, mutations in other responsible genes are poorly elucidated.
PLOS Genetics | 2013
Yukiko Nakano; Kazuaki Chayama; Hidenori Ochi; Masaaki Toshishige; Yasufumi Hayashida; Daiki Miki; C. Nelson Hayes; Hidekazu Suzuki; Takehito Tokuyama; Noboru Oda; Kazuyoshi Suenari; Yuko Uchimura-Makita; Kenta Kajihara; Akinori Sairaku; Chikaaki Motoda; Mai Fujiwara; Yoshikazu Watanabe; Yukihiko Yoshida; Kimie Ohkubo; Ichiro Watanabe; Akihiko Nogami; Kanae Hasegawa; Hiroshi Watanabe; Naoto Endo; Takeshi Aiba; Wataru Shimizu; Seiko Ohno; Minoru Horie; Koji Arihiro; Satoshi Tashiro
Unexplained cardiac arrest (UCA) with documented ventricular fibrillation (VF) is a major cause of sudden cardiac death. Abnormal sympathetic innervations have been shown to be a trigger of ventricular fibrillation. Further, adequate expression of SEMA3A was reported to be critical for normal patterning of cardiac sympathetic innervation. We investigated the relevance of the semaphorin 3A (SEMA3A) gene located at chromosome 5 in the etiology of UCA. Eighty-three Japanese patients diagnosed with UCA and 2,958 healthy controls from two different geographic regions in Japan were enrolled. A nonsynonymous polymorphism (I334V, rs138694505A>G) in exon 10 of the SEMA3A gene identified through resequencing was significantly associated with UCA (combined P = 0.0004, OR 3.08, 95%CI 1.67–5.7). Overall, 15.7% of UCA patients carried the risk genotype G, whereas only 5.6% did in controls. In patients with SEMA3A I334V, VF predominantly occurred at rest during the night. They showed sinus bradycardia, and their RR intervals on the 12-lead electrocardiography tended to be longer than those in patients without SEMA3A I334V (1031±111 ms versus 932±182 ms, P = 0.039). Immunofluorescence staining of cardiac biopsy specimens revealed that sympathetic nerves, which are absent in the subendocardial layer in normal hearts, extended to the subendocardial layer only in patients with SEMA3A I334V. Functional analyses revealed that the axon-repelling and axon-collapsing activities of mutant SEMA3A I334V genes were significantly weaker than those of wild-type SEMA3A genes. A high incidence of SEMA3A I334V in UCA patients and inappropriate innervation patterning in their hearts implicate involvement of the SEMA3A gene in the pathogenesis of UCA.
Heart Rhythm | 2012
Daisuke Izumi; Masaomi Chinushi; Kenichi Iijima; Hiroshi Furushima; Yukio Hosaka; Kanae Hasegawa; Yoshifusa Aizawa
BACKGROUND Previous studies have showed that the interval between the peak and the end of the T wave (Tp-e) is a marker of transmural dispersion of ventricular repolarization. OBJECTIVE We studied the relationship between (a) the Tp-e on local pseudo transmural electrograms (pseudo transmural Tp-e) or limb leads of body surface electrocardiogram (surface Tp-e) and (b) the intracardiac left ventricular (LV) repolarization during a drug-induced QT-interval prolongation. METHODS Using open-chested canine intact hearts treated by anthopleurin-A, transmural LV electrograms were recorded via needle electrodes placed in the basoanterior, midanterior, apicoanterior, basolateral, midlateral, and apicolateral LV wall. Recovery time (RT) was calculated as an index of local repolarization at each transmural unipolar electrode. RESULTS This model showed slower heart rate-dependent heterogeneous distribution of ventricular repolarization both along the basal to apical axis and along the transmural axis. RT was longer at the LV apex than at the base and longer in the lateral than in the anterior wall during the slower heart rate. A high correlation was found between surface Tp-e and total LV dispersion. In contrast, pseudo transmural Tp-e correlated with transmural RT dispersion. The shortest RT in the heart roughly corresponded to the peak, as did the longest RT with the end of the T wave on the surface electrocardiogram. CONCLUSION During drug-induced QT-interval prolongation with a large apicobasal and anterolateral dispersion of ventricular repolarization, the Tp-e in the limb leads expresses spatial (total) distribution of repolarization in the whole left ventricle.
Heart Rhythm | 2014
Kanae Hasegawa; Seiko Ohno; Takashi Ashihara; Hideki Itoh; Wei-Guang Ding; Futoshi Toyoda; Takeru Makiyama; Hisaaki Aoki; Yoshihide Nakamura; Brian P. Delisle; Hiroshi Matsuura; Minoru Horie
BACKGROUND Atrial fibrillation (AF) is one of the most common cardiac arrhythmias. In some patients, the disease is inheritable; however, hereditary aspects of AF remain not fully elucidated. OBJECTIVE The purpose of this study was to identify genetic backgrounds that contribute to juvenile-onset AF and to define the mechanism. METHODS In 30 consecutive juvenile-onset AF patients (onset age <50 years), we screened AF-related genes (KCNQ1, KCNH2, KCNE1-3, KCNE5, KCNJ2, SCN5A). We analyzed the function of mutant channels using whole-cell patch-clamp techniques and computer simulations. RESULTS Among the juvenile-onset AF patients, we identified three mutations (10%): SCN5A-M1875T, KCNJ2-M301K, and KCNQ1-G229D. Because KCNQ1 variant (G229D) identified in a 16-year-old boy was novel, we focused on the proband. The G229D-IKs was found to induce a large instantaneous activating component without deactivation after repolarization to -50 mV. In addition, wild-type (WT)/G229D-IKs (WT and mutant coexpression) displayed both instantaneous and time-dependent activating currents. Compared to WT-IKs, the tail current densities in WT/G229D-IKs were larger at test potentials between -130 and -40 mV but smaller at test potentials between 20 and 50 mV. Moreover, WT/G229D-IKs resulted in a negative voltage shift for current activation (-35.2 mV) and slower deactivation. WT/G229D-IKs conducted a large outward current induced by an atrial action potential waveform, and computer simulation incorporating the WT/G229D-IKs results revealed that the mutation shortened atrial but not ventricular action potential. CONCLUSION A novel KCNQ1-G229D mutation identified in a juvenile-onset AF patient altered the IKs activity and kinetics, thereby increasing the arrhythmogenicity to AF.
PLOS ONE | 2015
Seiko Ohno; Kanae Hasegawa; Minoru Horie
Catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT) is one of the causes of sudden cardiac death in young people and results from RYR2 mutations in ~60% of CPVT patients. The inheritance of the RYR2 mutations follows an autosomal dominant trait, however, de novo mutations are often identified during familial analysis. In 36 symptomatic CPVT probands with RYR2 mutations, we genotyped their parents and confirmed the origin of the respective mutation. In 26 sets of proband and both parents (trio), we identified 17 de novo mutations (65.4%), seven from their mothers and only two mutations were inherited from their fathers. Among nine sets of proband and mother, five mutations were inherited from mothers. Four other mutations were of unknown origin. The inheritance of RYR2 mutations was significantly more frequent from mothers (n = 12, 34.3%) than fathers (n = 2, 5.7%) (P = 0.013). The mean ages of onset were not significantly different in probands between de novo mutations and those from mothers. Thus, half of the RYR2 mutations in our cohort were de novo, and most of the remaining mutations were inherited from mothers. These data would be useful for family analysis and risk stratification of the disease.
Clinical Genetics | 2015
Kanae Hasegawa; Seiko Ohno; Hiromi Kimura; Hideki Itoh; Takeru Makiyama; Yukihiko Yoshida; Minoru Horie
Andersen–Tawil syndrome (ATS) is an inherited disease characterized by ventricular arrhythmias, periodic paralysis, and dysmorphic features. It results from a heterozygous mutation of KCNJ2, but little is known about mosaicism in ATS. We performed genetic analysis of KCNJ2 in 32 ATS probands and their family members and identified KCNJ2 mutations in 25 probands, 20 families who underwent extensive genetic testing. These tests revealed that seven probands carried de novo mutations while 13 carried inherited mutations from their parents. We then specifically assessed a single proband and the respective family. The proband was a 9 year old girl who fulfilled the ATS triad and carried an insertion mutation (p.75_76insThr). We determined that the probands mother carried a somatic mosaicism and that the probands younger brother also carried the ATS phenotype with the same insertion mutation. The mother, who exhibited mosaicism, was asymptomatic, although she exhibited Q(T)U prolongation. Mutant allele frequency was 11% as per TA cloning and 17.3% as per targeted deep sequencing. Our observations suggest that targeted deep sequencing is useful for the detection of mosaicism and that the detection of mosaic mutations in parents of apparently sporadic ATS patients can help in the process of genetic counseling.
Europace | 2012
Hiroshi Furushima; Masaomi Chinushi; Kenichi Iijima; Kanae Hasegawa; Akinori Sato; Daisuke Izumi; Hiroshi Watanabe; Yoshifusa Aizawa
AIM The aim of this study was to determine whether or not the coexistence of sustained ST-segment elevation and abnormal Q waves (STe-Q) could be a risk factor for electrical storm (ES) in implanted cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) patients with structural heart diseases. METHODS AND RESULTS In all, 156 consecutive patients received ICD therapy for secondary prevention of sudden cardiac death and/or sustained ventricular tachyarrhythmias were included. Electrical storm was defined as ≥3 separate episodes of ventricular tachycardia (VT) and/or ventricular fibrillation (VF) terminated by ICD therapies within 24 h. During a mean follow-up of 1825 ± 1188 days, 42 (26.9%) patients experienced ES, of whom 12 had coronary artery disease, 15 had idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy, 6 had hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, 4 had arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy, 4 had cardiac sarcoidosis, and 1 had valvular heart disease. Sustained ST-segment elevation and abnormal Q waves in ≥2 leads on the 12-lead electrocardiography was observed in 33 (21%) patients. On the Kaplan-Meier analysis, patients with STe-Q had a markedly higher risk of ES than those without STe-Q (P< 0.0001). The multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression model indicated that STe-Q and left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) (<30%) were independent risk factors associated with the recurrence of VT/VF (STe-Q: HR 1.962, 95% CI 1.24-3.12, P= 0.004; LVEF: HR 1.860, 95% CI 1.20-2.89, P= 0.006), and STe-Q was an independent risk factor associated with ES (HR 4.955, 95% CI 2.69-9.13, P< 0.0001). CONCLUSION Sustained ST-segment elevation and abnormal Q waves could be a risk factor of not only recurrent VT/VF but also ES in patients with structural heart diseases.