De novo Design of a Peptide Modulator to Reverse Sodium Channel Dysfunction Linked to Cardiac Arrhythmias and Epilepsy

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Abstract

Ion channels orchestrate electrical signaling in excitable cells. In nature, ion channel function is customized by modulatory proteins that have evolved to fulfill distinct physiological needs. Yet, engineering synthetic modulators that precisely tune ion channel function is challenging. One example involves the voltage-gated sodium (Na V ) channel that initiates the action potential, and whose dysfunction amplifies late/persistent sodium current ( I NaL ), a commonality that underlies various human diseases including cardiac arrhythmias and epilepsy. Here, using a computational protein design platform, we engineered a de novo peptide modulator, ELIXIR, that binds Na V channels with submicromolar affinity. Functional analysis revealed an unexpected selectivity in inhibiting ‘pathogenic’ I NaL and confirmed its effectiveness in reversing Na V dysfunction linked to both cardiac arrhythmias and epilepsy in cellular and murine models. These findings exemplify the efficacy of de novo protein design for engineering synthetic ion channel modulators and sets the stage for rational design of future therapeutic approaches.

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