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Circulation
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on December 20, 2004

Circulation. 2004
Published online before print December 20, 2004, doi: 10.1161/01.CIR.0000151291.32974.D5
A more recent version of this article appeared on January 4, 2005
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Submitted on June 17, 2004
Revised on September 1, 2004
Accepted on September 13, 2004

Transgenic Mouse Model of Ventricular Preexcitation and Atrioventricular Reentrant Tachycardia Induced by an AMP-Activated Protein Kinase Loss-of-Function Mutation Responsible for Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome

Jasvinder S. Sidhu MD, Yadavendra S. Rajawat MD, Tapan G. Rami MD, Michael H. Gollob MD, Zhinong Wang MD, PhD, Ruiyong Yuan MD, A. J. Marian MD, Francesco J. DeMayo MD, Donald Weilbacher MD, George E. Taffet MD, Joanna K. Davies PhD, David Carling PhD, Dirar S. Khoury PhD, and Robert Roberts MD*

From Baylor College of Medicine (J.S.S., Y.S.R., T.G.R., Z.Q., R.Y., A.J.M., F.J.D., D.W., G.E.T., D.S.K.), Houston, Tex; University of Ottawa Heart Institute (M.H.G., R.R.), Ottawa, Ontario, Canada; and Imperial College (J.K.D., D.C.), London, England.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: rroberts{at}ottawaheart.ca.

Background--We identified a gene (PRKAG2) that encodes the {gamma}-2 regulatory subunit of AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) with a mutation (Arg302Gln) responsible for familial Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome. The human phenotype consists of ventricular preexcitation, conduction abnormalities, and cardiac hypertrophy.

Methods and Results--To elucidate the molecular basis for the phenotype, transgenic mice were generated by cardiac-restricted expression of the wild-type (TGWT) and mutant(TGR302Q) PRKAG2 gene with the cardiac-specific promoter {alpha}-myosin heavy chain. ECG recordings and intracardiac electrophysiology studies demonstrated the TGR302Q mice to have ventricular preexcitation (PR interval 10±2 versus 33±5 ms in TGWT, P<0.05) and a prolonged QRS (20±5 versus 10±1 ms in TGWT, P<0.05). A distinct AV accessory pathway was confirmed by electrical and pharmacological stimulation and substantiated by induction of orthodromic AV reentrant tachycardia. Enzymatic activity of AMPK in the mutant heart was significantly reduced (0.009±0.003 versus 0.025±0.001 nmol · min-1 · g-1 in nontransgenic mice), presumably owing to the mutation disrupting the AMP binding site. Excessive cardiac glycogen was observed. Hypertrophy was confirmed by increases in heart weight (296 versus 140 mg in TGWT) and ventricular wall thickness.

Conclusions--We have developed a genetic animal model of WPW that expresses a mutation responsible for a familial form of WPW syndrome with a phenotype identical to that of the human, including induction of supraventricular arrhythmia. The defect is due to loss of function of AMPK. Elucidation of the molecular basis should provide insight into development of the cardiac conduction system and accessory pathways.


Key words: Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome • genetics • tachycardia