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Loss of Mitochondrial Ca2+ Uniporter Limits Inotropic Reserve and Provides Trigger and Substrate for Arrhythmias in Barth Syndrome Cardiomyopathy
ISSN
0009-7322
Date Issued
2021
Author(s)
Bertero, Edoardo
Nickel, Alexander
Kohlhaas, Michael
Hohl, Mathias
Sequeira, Vasco
Brune, Carolin
Schwemmlein, Julia
Abeßer, Marco
Schuh, Kai
Kutschka, Ilona
Carlein, Christopher
Münker, Kai
Atighetchi, Sarah
Müller, Andreas
Kazakov, Andrey
Kappl, Reinhard
von der Malsburg, Karina
van der Laan, Martin
Schiuma, Anna-Florentine
Böhm, Michael
Laufs, Ulrich
Hoth, Markus
Kuhn, Michaela
Dudek, Jan
von der Malsburg, Alexander
Prates Roma, Leticia
Maack, Christoph
DOI
10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.121.053755
Abstract
Barth syndrome (BTHS) is caused by mutations of the gene encoding tafazzin, which catalyzes maturation of mitochondrial cardiolipin and often manifests with systolic dysfunction during early infancy. Beyond the first months of life, BTHS cardiomyopathy typically transitions to a phenotype of diastolic dysfunction with preserved ejection fraction, blunted contractile reserve during exercise, and arrhythmic vulnerability. Previous studies traced BTHS cardiomyopathy to mitochondrial formation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). Because mitochondrial function and ROS formation are regulated by excitation-contraction coupling, integrated analysis of mechano-energetic coupling is required to delineate the pathomechanisms of BTHS cardiomyopathy.