Transgenic LQT2, LQT5, and LQT2‐5 rabbit models with decreased repolarisation reserve for prediction of drug‐induced ventricular arrhythmias

Abstract: Background and Purpose
Reliable prediction of pro-arrhythmic side effects of novel drug candidates is still a major challenge. Although drug-induced pro-arrhythmia occurs primarily in patients with pre-existing repolarisation disturbances, healthy animals are employed for pro-arrhythmia testing. To improve current safety screening, transgenic long QT (LQTS) rabbit models with impaired repolarisation reserve were generated by overexpressing loss-of-function mutations of human HERG (HERG-G628S, loss of IKr; LQT2), KCNE1 (KCNE1-G52R, decreased IKs; LQT5), or both transgenes (LQT2-5) in the heart.

Experimental Approach
Effects of K+ channel blockers on cardiac repolarisation and arrhythmia susceptibility were assessed in healthy wild-type (WT) and LQTS rabbits using in vivo ECG and ex vivo monophasic action potential and ECG recordings in Langendorff-perfused hearts.

Key Results
LQTS models reflect patients with clinically “silent” (LQT5) or “manifest” (LQT2 and LQT2-5) impairment in cardiac repolarisation reserve: they were more sensitive in detecting IKr-blocking (LQT5) or IK1/IKs-blocking (LQT2 and LQT2-5) properties of drugs compared to healthy WT animals. Impaired QT-shortening capacity at fast heart rates was observed due to disturbed IKs function in LQT5 and LQT2-5. Importantly, LQTS models exhibited higher incidence, longer duration, and more malignant types of ex vivo arrhythmias than WT.

Conclusion and Implications
LQTS models represent patients with reduced repolarisation reserve due to different pathomechanisms. As they demonstrate increased sensitivity to different specific ion channel blockers (IKr blockade in LQT5 and IK1 and IKs blockade in LQT2 and LQT2-5), their combined use could provide more reliable and more thorough prediction of (multichannel-based) pro-arrhythmic potential of novel drug candidates

Location
Deutsche Nationalbibliothek Frankfurt am Main
Extent
Online-Ressource
Language
Englisch
Notes
British journal of pharmacology. - 177, 16 (2020) , 3744-3759, ISSN: 1476-5381

Event
Veröffentlichung
(where)
Freiburg
(who)
Universität
(when)
2020
Creator
Hornyik, Tibor
Castiglione, Alessandro
Franke, Gerlind
Perez Feliz, Stefanie
Major, Péter
Hiripi, László
Koren, Gideon
Bosze, Zsuzsanna
Varró, András
Zehender, Manfred Karl-Heinz
Brunner, Michael
Bode, Christoph
Baczkó, István
Odening, Katja Elisabeth

DOI
10.1111/bph.15098
URN
urn:nbn:de:bsz:25-freidok-1668474
Rights
Kein Open Access; Der Zugriff auf das Objekt ist unbeschränkt möglich.
Last update
25.03.2025, 1:46 PM CET

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Associated

Time of origin

  • 2020

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