A collaboration between Vanderbilt University professors of chemistry and medicine yielded a promising compound to treat arrhythmia from an unlikely place: the fungal natural product verticilide.
Jeffrey Johnston, Stevenson Professor of Chemistry, said the natural product isn’t active except in insects, but the synthetic mirror-image version – or enantiomer – created in his lab is potently active in mammals against ryanodine receptor type 2, whose dysfunction can cause irregular heartbeats. Currently, many patients who suffer from arrhythmia are dependent on implantable cardioverter-defibrillators to keep their hearts working properly.
Johnston worked with Bjorn Knollmann, director of the Vanderbilt Center for Arrhythmia Research and Therapeutics, to show the synthetic compound inhibited calcium leak from ryanodine receptors, thus preventing arrhythmia.
In addition to establishing potency, the team’s tests on cells and, later, mice showed that even high doses of the unnatural version caused no ill effects.
Their work appeared Feb. 21 in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Science in a paper titled “Unnatural verticilide enantiomer inhibits type 2 ryanodine receptor-mediated calcium leak and is antiarrhythmic.”
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