Calmodulinopathy: Functional Effects of CALM Mutations and Their Relationship With Clinical Phenotypes

Front Cardiovasc Med. 2018 Dec 11:5:176. doi: 10.3389/fcvm.2018.00176. eCollection 2018.

Abstract

In spite of the widespread role of calmodulin (CaM) in cellular signaling, CaM mutations lead specifically to cardiac manifestations, characterized by remarkable electrical instability and a high incidence of sudden death at young age. Penetrance of the mutations is surprisingly high, thus postulating a high degree of functional dominance. According to the clinical patterns, arrhythmogenesis in CaM mutations can be attributed, in the majority of cases, to either prolonged repolarization (as in long-QT syndrome, LQTS phenotype), or to instability of the intracellular Ca2+ store (as in catecholamine-induced tachycardias, CPVT phenotype). This review discusses how mutations affect CaM signaling function and how this may relate to the distinct arrhythmia phenotypes/mechanisms observed in patients; this involves mechanistic interpretation of negative dominance and mutation-specific CaM-target interactions. Knowledge of the mechanisms involved may allow critical approach to clinical manifestations and aid in the development of therapeutic strategies for "calmodulinopathies," a recently identified nosological entity.

Keywords: Ca2+ handling; arrhythmia mechanisms; calmodulin mutations; ion channels; repolarization.

Publication types

  • Review