Pharmacological Rescue of Human K + Channel Long-QT2 Mutations

Abstract
Background— Defective protein trafficking is a consequence of gene mutations. Human long-QT (LQT) syndrome results from mutations in several genes, including the human ether-a-go-go-related gene (HERG), which encodes a delayed rectifier K+ current. Trafficking-defective mutant HERG protein is a mechanism for reduced delayed rectifier K+ current in LQT2, and high-affinity HERG channel-blocking drugs can result in pharmacological rescue. Methods and Results— We postulated that drug molecules modified to remove high-affinity HERG block may still stabilize mutant proteins in a conformation required for rescue. We tested terfenadine carboxylate (fexofenadine) and terfenadine, structurally similar drugs with markedly different affinities for HERG block, for rescue of trafficking-defective LQT2 mutations. Terfenadine rescued the N470D mutation but blocked the channels. In contrast, fexofenadine rescued N470D with a half-maximal rescue concentration of 177 nmol/L, which is ≈350-fold lower than the half-maximal ch...