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- Title
A Common East Asian aldehyde dehydrogenase 2*2 variant promotes ventricular arrhythmia with chronic light-to-moderate alcohol use in mice.
- Authors
Lee, An-Sheng; Sung, Yen-Ling; Pan, Szu-Hua; Sung, Kuo-Tzu; Su, Cheng-Huang; Ding, Shiao-Li; Lu, Ying-Jui; Hsieh, Chin-Ling; Chen, Yun-Fang; Liu, Chuan-Chuan; Chen, Wei-Yu; Chen, Xuan-Ren; Chung, Fa-Po; Wang, Shih-Wei; Chen, Che-Hong; Mochly-Rosen, Daria; Hung, Chung-Lieh; Yeh, Hung-I; Lin, Shien-Fong
- Abstract
Chronic heavy alcohol use is associated with lethal arrhythmias. Whether common East Asian-specific aldehyde dehydrogenase deficiency (ALDH2*2) contributes to arrhythmogenesis caused by low level alcohol use remains unclear. Here we show 59 habitual alcohol users carrying ALDH2 rs671 have longer QT interval (corrected) and higher ventricular tachyarrhythmia events compared with 137 ALDH2 wild-type (Wt) habitual alcohol users and 57 alcohol non-users. Notably, we observe QT prolongation and a higher risk of premature ventricular contractions among human ALDH2 variants showing habitual light-to-moderate alcohol consumption. We recapitulate a human electrophysiological QT prolongation phenotype using a mouse ALDH2*2 knock-in (KI) model treated with 4% ethanol, which shows markedly reduced total amount of connexin43 albeit increased lateralization accompanied by markedly downregulated sarcolemmal Nav1.5, Kv1.4 and Kv4.2 expressions compared to EtOH-treated Wt mice. Whole-cell patch-clamps reveal a more pronounced action potential prolongation in EtOH-treated ALDH2*2 KI mice. By programmed electrical stimulation, rotors are only provokable in EtOH-treated ALDH2*2 KI mice along with higher number and duration of ventricular arrhythmia episodes. The present research helps formulate safe alcohol drinking guideline for ALDH2 deficient population and develop novel protective agents for these subjects. A common variant in the aldehyde dehydrogenase, ALDH2, which is enriched in East Asian populations can promote the risk of ventricular arrhythmia in mice exposed to a low alcohol dose emulating light alcohol consumption in humans.
- Publication
Communications Biology, 2023, Vol 6, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
2399-3642
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/s42003-023-04985-x