Item type:Article, Open Access

Popeye domain containing proteins modulate the voltage-gated cardiac sodium channel Nav1.5

Abstract

Popeye domain containing (POPDC) proteins are predominantly expressed in the heart and skeletal muscle, modulating the K2P potassium channel TREK-1 in a cAMP-dependent manner. POPDC1 and POPDC2 variants cause cardiac conduction disorders with or without muscular dystrophy. Searching for POPDC2-modulated ion channels using a functional co-expression screen in Xenopus oocytes, we found POPDC proteins to modulate the cardiac sodium channel Nav1.5. POPDC proteins downregulate Nav1.5 currents in a cAMP-dependent manner by reducing the surface expression of the channel. POPDC2 and Nav1.5 are both expressed in different regions of the murine heart and consistently POPDC2 co-immunoprecipitates with Nav1.5 from native cardiac tissue. Strikingly, the knock-down of popdc2 in embryonic zebrafish caused an increased upstroke velocity and overshoot of cardiac action potentials. The POPDC modulation of Nav1.5 provides a new mechanism to regulate cardiac sodium channel densities under sympathetic stimulation, which is likely to have a functional impact on cardiac physiology and inherited arrhythmias.

Metadata

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Rinné, Susanne; Kiper, Aytug K.; Jacob, Ralf; Ortiz-Bonnin, Beatriz; Schindler, Roland F.R.; Fischer, Sabine; Komadowski, Marlene; De Martino, Emilia; Schäfer, Martin K.-H.; Cornelius, Tamina; Fabritz, Larissa; Helker, Christian S.M.; Brand, Thomas; Decher, Niels (0000-0002-9433-687X): Popeye domain containing proteins modulate the voltage-gated cardiac sodium channel Nav1.5. In: , Jg. (2025-01-14), . DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2024.109696..

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