Chronically elevated branched chain amino acid levels are pro-arrhythmic.
2021
Aim. Cardiac arrhythmias comprise a major health and economic burden and are associated
with significant morbidity and mortality, including cardiac failure, stroke and sudden cardiac
death (SCD). Development of efficient preventive and therapeutic strategies is hampered by
incomplete knowledge of disease mechanisms and pathways. Our aim is to identify novel
mechanisms underlying cardiac arrhythmia and SCD using an unbiased approach.
Methods and Results. We employed a phenotype-driven N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU)
mutagenesis screen and identified a mouse line with a high incidence of sudden death at young
age (6-9 weeks) in the absence of prior symptoms. Affected mice were found to be homozygous
for the nonsense mutation Bcat2p.Q300*/p.Q300* in the Bcat2 gene encoding branched chain amino
acid transaminase 2. At the age of 4-5 weeks, Bcat2p.Q300*/p.Q300* mice displayed drastic increase
of plasma levels of branch chain amino acids (BCAAs – leucine, isoleucine, valine) due to the
incomplete catabolism of BCAAs, in addition to inducible arrhythmias ex vivo as well as
cardiac conduction and repolarization disturbances. In line with these findings, plasma BCAA
levels were positively correlated to ECG indices of conduction and repolarization in the German
community-based KORA F4 Study. Isolated cardiomyocytes from Bcat2p.Q300*/p.Q300* mice
revealed action potential (AP) prolongation, pro-arrhythmic events (early and late
afterdepolarizations, triggered APs) and dysregulated calcium homeostasis. Incubation of
human pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes with elevated concentration of BCAAs
induced similar calcium dysregulation and pro-arrhythmic events which were prevented by
rapamycin, demonstrating the crucial involvement of mTOR pathway activation.
Conclusions. Our findings identify for the first time a causative link between elevated BCAAs
and arrhythmia, which has implications for arrhythmogenesis in conditions associated with
BCAA metabolism dysregulation such as diabetes, metabolic syndrome and heart failure.
Translational perspectives. Development of efficient anti-arrhythmic strategies is hampered by
incomplete knowledge of disease mechanisms. Using an unbiased approach, we here identified
for the first time a pro-arrhythmic effect of increased levels of branched chain amino acids
(BCAAs). This is of particular relevance for conditions associated with BCAA dysregulation
and increased arrhythmia risk, including heart failure, obesity and diabetes, as well as for
athletes supplementing their diet with BCAAs. Such metabolic dysregulation is potentially
modifiable through dietary interventions, paving the way for novel preventive strategies. Our
findings furthermore identify mTOR inhibition as a potential anti-arrhythmic strategy in
patients with metabolic syndrome.
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