Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Thomas C. Atack is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Thomas C. Atack.


Circulation Research | 2012

Blocking Scn10a Channels in Heart Reduces Late Sodium Current and Is Antiarrhythmic

Tao Yang; Thomas C. Atack; Dina Myers Stroud; Wei Zhang; Lynn Hall; Dan M. Roden

Rationale: Although the sodium channel locus SCN10A has been implicated by genome-wide association studies as a modulator of cardiac electrophysiology, the role of its gene product Nav1.8 as a modulator of cardiac ion currents is unknown. Objective: We determined the electrophysiological and pharmacological properties of Nav1.8 in heterologous cell systems and assessed the antiarrhythmic effect of Nav1.8 block on isolated mouse and rabbit ventricular cardiomyocytes. Methods and Results: We first demonstrated that Scn10a transcripts are identified in mouse heart and that the blocker A-803467 is highly specific for Nav1.8 current over that of Nav1.5, the canonical cardiac sodium channel encoded by SCN5A. We then showed that low concentrations of A-803467 selectively block “late” sodium current and shorten action potentials in mouse and rabbit cardiomyocytes. Exaggerated late sodium current is known to mediate arrhythmogenic early afterdepolarizations in heart, and these were similarly suppressed by low concentrations of A-803467. Conclusions: Scn10a expression contributes to late sodium current in heart and represents a new target for antiarrhythmic intervention.


Circulation | 2011

Striking in Vivo Phenotype of a Disease-Associated Human SCN5A Mutation Producing Minimal Changes in Vitro

Hiroshi Watanabe; Tao Yang; Dina Myers Stroud; John S. Lowe; Louise Harris; Thomas C. Atack; Dao W. Wang; Susan B. Hipkens; Brenda F. Leake; Lynn Hall; Sabina Kupershmidt; Nagesh Chopra; Mark A. Magnuson; Naohito Tanabe; Björn C. Knollmann; Alfred L. George; Dan M. Roden

Background— The D1275N SCN5A mutation has been associated with a range of unusual phenotypes, including conduction disease and dilated cardiomyopathy, as well as atrial and ventricular tachyarrhythmias. However, when D1275N is studied in heterologous expression systems, most studies show near-normal sodium channel function. Thus, the relationship of the variant to the clinical phenotypes remains uncertain. Methods and Results— We identified D1275N in a patient with atrial flutter, atrial standstill, conduction disease, and sinus node dysfunction. There was no major difference in biophysical properties between wild-type and D1275N channels expressed in Chinese hamster ovary cells or tsA201 cells in the absence or presence of &bgr;1 subunits. To determine D1275N function in vivo, the Scn5a locus was modified to knock out the mouse gene, and the full-length wild-type (H) or D1275N (DN) human SCN5A cDNAs were then inserted at the modified locus by recombinase mediated cassette exchange. Mice carrying the DN allele displayed slow conduction, heart block, atrial fibrillation, ventricular tachycardia, and a dilated cardiomyopathy phenotype, with no significant fibrosis or myocyte disarray on histological examination. The DN allele conferred gene-dose–dependent increases in SCN5A mRNA abundance but reduced sodium channel protein abundance and peak sodium current amplitudes (H/H, 41.0±2.9 pA/pF at −30 mV; DN/H, 19.2±3.1 pA/pF, P<0.001 vs H/H; DN/DN, 9.3±1.1 pA/pF, P<0.001 versus H/H). Conclusions— Although D1275N produces near-normal currents in multiple heterologous expression experiments, our data establish this variant as a pathological mutation that generates conduction slowing, arrhythmias, and a dilated cardiomyopathy phenotype by reducing cardiac sodium current.


Cardiovascular Research | 2014

SCN10A/Nav1.8 modulation of peak and late sodium currents in patients with early onset atrial fibrillation

Eleonora Savio-Galimberti; Peter Weeke; Raafia Muhammad; Marcia Blair; Sami Ansari; Laura Short; Thomas C. Atack; Kaylen Kor; Carlos G. Vanoye; Morten S. Olesen; LuCamp; Tao Yang; Alfred L. George; Dan M. Roden; Dawood Darbar

AIMS To test the hypothesis that vulnerability to atrial fibrillation (AF) is associated with rare coding sequence variation in the SCN10A gene, which encodes the voltage-gated sodium channel isoform NaV1.8 found primarily in peripheral nerves and to identify potentially disease-related mechanisms in high-priority rare variants using in-vitro electrophysiology. METHODS AND RESULTS We re-sequenced SCN10A in 274 patients with early onset AF from the Vanderbilt AF Registry to identify rare coding variants. Engineered variants were transiently expressed in ND7/23 cells and whole-cell voltage clamp experiments were conducted to elucidate their functional properties. Resequencing SCN10A identified 18 heterozygous rare coding variants (minor allele frequency ≤1%) in 18 (6.6%) AF probands. Four probands were carriers of two rare variants each and 14 were carriers of one coding variant. Based on evidence of co-segregation, initial assessment of functional importance, and presence in ≥1 AF proband, three variants (417delK, A1886V, and the compound variant Y158D-R814H) were selected for functional studies. The 417delK variant displayed near absent current while A1886V and Y158D-R814H exhibited enhanced peak and late (INa-L) sodium currents; both Y158D and R818H individually contributed to this phenotype. CONCLUSION Rare SCN10A variants encoding Nav1.8 were identified in 6.6% of patients with early onset AF. In-vitro electrophysiological studies demonstrated profoundly altered function in 3/3 high-priority variants. Collectively, these data strongly support the hypothesis that rare SCN10A variants may contribute to AF susceptibility.


Circulation Research | 2011

Informatic and Functional Approaches to Identifying a Regulatory Region for the Cardiac Sodium Channel

Thomas C. Atack; Dina Myers Stroud; Hiroshi Watanabe; Tao Yang; Lynn Hall; Susan B. Hipkens; John S. Lowe; Brenda F. Leake; Mark A. Magnuson; Ping Yang; Dan M. Roden

Rationale: Although multiple lines of evidence suggest that variable expression of the cardiac sodium channel gene SCN5A plays a role in susceptibility to arrhythmia, little is known about its transcriptional regulation. Objective: We used in silico and in vitro experiments to identify possible noncoding sequences important for transcriptional regulation of SCN5A. The results were extended to mice in which a putative regulatory region was deleted. Methods and Results: We identified 92 noncoding regions highly conserved (>70%) between human and mouse SCN5A orthologs. Three conserved noncoding sequences (CNS) showed significant (>5-fold) activity in luciferase assays. Further in vitro studies indicated one, CNS28 in intron 1, as a potential regulatory region. Using recombinase-mediated cassette exchange (RMCE), we generated mice in which a 435–base pair region encompassing CNS28 was removed. Animals homozygous for the deletion showed significant increases in SCN5A transcripts, NaV1.5 protein abundance, and sodium current measured in isolated ventricular myocytes. ECGs revealed a significantly shorter QRS (10.7±0.2 ms in controls versus 9.7±0.2 ms in knockouts), indicating more rapid ventricular conduction. In vitro analysis of CNS28 identified a short 3′ segment within this region required for regulatory activity and including an E-box motif. Deletion of this segment reduced reporter activity to 3.6%±0.3% of baseline in CHO cells and 16%±3% in myocytes (both P<0.05), and mutation of individual sites in the E-box restored activity to 62%±4% and 57%±2% of baseline in CHO cells and myocytes, respectively (both P<0.05). Conclusions: These findings establish that regulation of cardiac sodium channel expression modulates channel function in vivo, and identify a noncoding region underlying this regulation.


Cardiovascular Research | 2012

Increased late sodium current contributes to long QT-related arrhythmia susceptibility in female mice

John S. Lowe; Dina Myers Stroud; Tao Yang; Lynn Hall; Thomas C. Atack; Dan M. Roden


Journal of the American Heart Association | 2016

Contrasting Nav1.8 Activity in Scn10a−/− Ventricular Myocytes and the Intact Heart

Dina Myers Stroud; Tao Yang; Kevin Bersell; Dymtro O. Kryshtal; Satomi Nagao; Christian M. Shaffer; Laura Short; Lynn Hall; Thomas C. Atack; Wei Zhang; Björn C. Knollmann; Franz J. Baudenbacher; Dan M. Roden


Circulation | 2013

Abstract 18645: Rare SCN10A Variants Associated With Lone Atrial Fibrillation Modulate Peak and Late Sodium Currents

Eleonora Savio Galimberti; Peter Weeke; Carlos G. Vanoye; Tao Yang; Kaylen Kor; Thomas C. Atack; Alfred L. George; Dan M. Roden; Dawood Darbar


Heart Rhythm | 2012

SCN10A Rare Variants Associated with Atrial Fibrillation and Slow Ventricular Rates Reveal Increased Late Sodium Current

E. Savio Galimberti; Carlos G. Vanoye; Tao Yang; Thomas C. Atack; Raafia Muhammad; Dan M. Roden; Dawood Darbar


Circulation | 2012

Abstract 12219: Arrhythmia-associated Variants in the SCN5A Promoter and Regulatory Regions

Nobue Yagihara; Hiroshi Watanabe; Thomas C. Atack; Seiko Ohno; Wataru Shimizu; Stéphanie Chatel; Tamara T. Koopmann; Ping Yang; Marylyn D. Ritchie; Stephen T. Turner; Kanae Hasegawa; Minako Wakasugi; Osamu Onodera; Ryozo Kuwano; Laetitia Duboscq-Bidot; Richard Redon; Minoru Horie; Jean-Jacques Schott; Makoto Takayama; Yukiko Nakano; Connie R. Bezzina; Arthur A.M. Wilde; Takeshi Momotsu; Naoto Endo; Dawood Darbar; Dan M. Roden; Naomasa Makita


Circulation | 2012

Abstract 14423: Blocking Scn10a Channels in Heart Reduces Late Sodium Current and is Antiarrhythmic

Tao Yang; Thomas C. Atack; Dina Myers Stroud; Wei Zhang; Lynn Hall; Dan M. Roden

Collaboration


Dive into the Thomas C. Atack's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dan M. Roden

Vanderbilt University Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Tao Yang

Vanderbilt University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lynn Hall

Vanderbilt University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge