International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Apr 2022)

shRNAs Targeting a Common <i>KCNQ1</i> Variant Could Alleviate Long-QT1 Disease Severity by Inhibiting a Mutant Allele

  • Lucía Cócera-Ortega,
  • Ronald Wilders,
  • Selina C. Kamps,
  • Benedetta Fabrizi,
  • Irit Huber,
  • Ingeborg van der Made,
  • Anouk van den Bout,
  • Dylan K. de Vries,
  • Lior Gepstein,
  • Arie O. Verkerk,
  • Yigal M. Pinto,
  • Anke J. Tijsen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms23074053
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 7
p. 4053

Abstract

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Long-QT syndrome type 1 (LQT1) is caused by mutations in KCNQ1. Patients heterozygous for such a mutation co-assemble both mutant and wild-type KCNQ1-encoded subunits into tetrameric Kv7.1 potassium channels. Here, we investigated whether allele-specific inhibition of mutant KCNQ1 by targeting a common variant can shift the balance towards increased incorporation of the wild-type allele to alleviate the disease in human-induced pluripotent stem-cell-derived cardiomyocytes (hiPSC-CMs). We identified the single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) rs1057128 (G/A) in KCNQ1, with a heterozygosity of 27% in the European population. Next, we determined allele-specificity of short-hairpin RNAs (shRNAs) targeting either allele of this SNP in hiPSC-CMs that carry an LQT1 mutation. Our shRNAs downregulated 60% of the A allele and 40% of the G allele without affecting the non-targeted allele. Suppression of the mutant KCNQ1 allele by 60% decreased the occurrence of arrhythmic events in hiPSC-CMs measured by a voltage-sensitive reporter, while suppression of the wild-type allele increased the occurrence of arrhythmic events. Furthermore, computer simulations based on another LQT1 mutation revealed that 60% suppression of the mutant KCNQ1 allele shortens the prolonged action potential in an adult cardiomyocyte model. We conclude that allele-specific inhibition of a mutant KCNQ1 allele by targeting a common variant may alleviate the disease. This novel approach avoids the need to design shRNAs to target every single mutation and opens up the exciting possibility of treating multiple LQT1-causing mutations with only two shRNAs.

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