Celebrities in the heart, strangers in the pancreatic beta cell: Voltage-gated potassium channels K v 7.1 and K v 11.1 bridge long QT syndrome with hyperinsulinaemia as well as type 2 diabetes.
Anniek Frederike LubberdingChristian R JuhlEmil Z SkovhøjJørgen Kim KantersThomas Mandrup-PoulsenSigne Sørensen TorekovPublished in: Acta physiologica (Oxford, England) (2022)
Voltage-gated potassium (K v ) channels play an important role in the repolarization of a variety of excitable tissues, including in the cardiomyocyte and the pancreatic beta cell. Recently, individuals carrying loss-of-function (LoF) mutations in KCNQ1, encoding K v 7.1, and KCNH2 (hERG), encoding K v 11.1, were found to exhibit post-prandial hyperinsulinaemia and episodes of hypoglycaemia. These LoF mutations also cause the cardiac disorder long QT syndrome (LQTS), which can be aggravated by hypoglycaemia. Interestingly, patients with LQTS also have a higher burden of diabetes compared to the background population, an apparent paradox in relation to the hyperinsulinaemic phenotype, and KCNQ1 has been identified as a type 2 diabetes risk gene. This review article summarizes the involvement of delayed rectifier K + channels in pancreatic beta cell function, with emphasis on K v 7.1 and K v 11.1, using the cardiomyocyte for context. The functional and clinical consequences of LoF mutations and polymorphisms in these channels on blood glucose homeostasis are explored using evidence from pre-clinical, clinical and genome-wide association studies, thereby evaluating the link between LQTS, hyperinsulinaemia and type 2 diabetes.
Keyphrases
- type diabetes
- glycemic control
- blood glucose
- cardiovascular disease
- cell therapy
- insulin resistance
- single cell
- heart failure
- genome wide association
- gene expression
- angiotensin ii
- stem cells
- blood pressure
- case report
- adipose tissue
- genome wide
- bone marrow
- mesenchymal stem cells
- atrial fibrillation
- magnetic resonance
- metabolic syndrome
- endothelial cells
- transcription factor
- weight loss
- diffusion weighted imaging