Journal of Arrhythmia (Oct 2021)

Contribution of HCN1 variant to sinus bradycardia: A case report

  • Hangang Yu,
  • Bryan Gall,
  • Mackenzie Newman,
  • Quincy Hathaway,
  • Kathleen Brundage,
  • Amanda Ammer,
  • Peter Mathers,
  • David Siderovski,
  • Robert W. Hull

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/joa3.12598
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37, no. 5
pp. 1337 – 1347

Abstract

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Abstract Background Missense mutations in the hyperpolarization‐activated cyclic nucleotide‐modulated (HCN) channel 4 (HCN4) are one of the genetic causes of cardiac sinus bradycardia. Objective To investigate possible HCN4 channel mutation in a young patient with profound sinus bradycardia. Methods Direct sequencing of HCN4 and whole‐exome sequencing were performed on DNA samples from the indexed patient (P), the patient's son (PS), and a family unrelated healthy long‐distance running volunteer (V). Resting heart rate was 31 bpm for P, 67 bpm for PS, and 50 bpm for V. Immunoblots, flow cytometry, and immunocytofluorescence confocal imaging were used to study cellular distribution of channel variants. Patch‐clamp electrophysiology was used to investigate the properties of mutant HCN1 channels. Results In P no missense mutations were found in the HCN4 gene; instead, we found two heterozygous variants in the HCN1 gene: deletion of an N‐terminal glycine triplet (72GGG74, “N‐del”) and a novel missense variant, P851A, in the C‐terminal region. N‐del variant was found before and shared by PS. These two variations were not found in V. Compared to wild type, N‐del and P851A reduced cell surface expression and negatively shifted voltage‐activation with slower activation kinetics. Conclusion Decreased channel activity HCN1 mutant channel makes it unable to contribute to early depolarization of sinus node action potential, thus likely a main cause of the profound sinus bradycardia in this patient.

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