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Modulating the voltage sensor of a cardiac potassium channel shows antiarrhythmic effects.

Yangyang LinSam Z GrinterZhongju LuXianjin XuHong Zhan WangHongwu LiangPanpan HouJunyuan GaoChris ClausenJingyi ShiWenshan ZhaoZhiwei MaYong-Feng LiuKelli McFarland WhiteLu ZhaoPo Wei KangGuohui ZhangIra S CohenXiaoqin ZouJianmin Cui
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2021)
Cardiac arrhythmias are the most common cause of sudden cardiac death worldwide. Lengthening the ventricular action potential duration (APD), either congenitally or via pathologic or pharmacologic means, predisposes to a life-threatening ventricular arrhythmia, Torsade de Pointes. IKs (KCNQ1+KCNE1), a slowly activating K+ current, plays a role in action potential repolarization. In this study, we screened a chemical library in silico by docking compounds to the voltage-sensing domain (VSD) of the IKs channel. Here, we show that C28 specifically shifted IKs VSD activation in ventricle to more negative voltages and reversed the drug-induced lengthening of APD. At the same dosage, C28 did not cause significant changes of the normal APD in either ventricle or atrium. This study provides evidence in support of a computational prediction of IKs VSD activation as a potential therapeutic approach for all forms of APD prolongation. This outcome could expand the therapeutic efficacy of a myriad of currently approved drugs that may trigger arrhythmias.
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