Postmortem Molecular Analysis of SCN5A Defects in Sudden Infant Death Syndrome
CONTEXT Fatal arrhythmias from occult long QT syndrome may be responsible for some cases of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). Because patients who have long QT syndrome with sodium channel gene (SCN5A) defects have an increased frequency of cardiac events during sleep, and a recent case is report...
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Veröffentlicht in: | JAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association 2001-11, Vol.286 (18), p.2264-2269 |
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Zusammenfassung: | CONTEXT
Fatal arrhythmias from occult long QT syndrome may be responsible for
some cases of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). Because patients who have
long QT syndrome with sodium channel
gene (SCN5A)
defects have an increased frequency of cardiac events during sleep, and a
recent case is reported of a sporadic SCN5Amutation in an infant with near SIDS, SCN5A has emerged as
the leading candidate ion channel gene for SIDS.
OBJECTIVE
To determine the prevalence and functional properties of SCN5A mutations in SIDS.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND SUBJECTS
Postmortem molecular analysis of 93 cases of SIDS or undetermined infant
death identified by the Medical Examiner's Office of the Arkansas State Crime
Laboratory between September 1997 and August 1999.
GenomicDNA was extracted
from frozen myocardium and subjected to SCN5A mutational
analyses. Missense mutations were incorporated into the human heart sodium
channel α subunit by mutagenesis, transiently transfected into human
embryonic kidney cells, and characterized electrophysiologically.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
Molecular and functional characterization of SCN5A defects.
RESULTS
Two of the 93 cases of SIDS possessed SCN5A
mutations: a 6-week-old white male with an A997S missense mutation in
exon 17 and a 1-month old white male with an R1826H mutation in exon 28. These
2 distinct mutations occurred in highly conserved regions of the sodium channel
and were absent in 400 control patients (800 alleles). Functionally, the A997S
and R1826H mutant channels expressed a sodium current characterized by slower
decay and a 2- to 3-fold increase in late sodium current.
CONCLUSION
Approximately 2% of this prospective, population-based cohort of SIDS
cases had an identifiable SCN5A channel defect, suggesting
that mutations in cardiac ion channels may provide a lethal arrhythmogenic
substrate in some infants at risk for SIDS. |
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ISSN: | 0098-7484 1538-3598 |
DOI: | 10.1001/jama.286.18.2264 |