23 Mar 2017

Fainting disorder mechanism figured out

Fainting caused by POTS is regulated by switching gene
function off. Image:  Imgur/Twoisnoe
by Anne Crawford

Central Clinical School (CCS) investigators have discovered the mechanism underlying Postural Orthostatic Tachycardia Syndrome (POTS), the condition famously affecting the former lead singer of The Wiggles.

POTS is a disorder characterised by orthostatic intolerance – having difficulty in becoming upright, particularly when standing up from a lying-down position, when a greatly reduced volume of blood returns to the heart. Symptoms can include feeling light-headed, fainting, fatigue and slurred speech. Interestingly, eighty per cent of those with the condition are women. 


Greg Page AM, the “Yellow Wiggle”, left the popular children's music group in late 2006 for some years after developing symptoms associated with POTS, later dubbed ‘Wiggles Disease’.

Researchers Professor Sam El-Osta and then PhD student Abdul Waleed Khan – who joined the CCS from the Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute with the opening of the new Department of Diabetes – have revealed that the problem has an epigenetic, rather than genetic, basis.

While the gene implicated in POTS – norepinephrine transporter (NET) – was known for several decades, past research had failed to find a genetic mutation responsible for symptoms of POTS. 

The CCS scientists discovered chemical marks on the NET gene responsible for repressing or turning the gene off. They delved further and found that a repressor protein called MeCP2 together with a non-coding RNA (let-7i) was critical in the gene silencing.

In another exciting development, the researchers, collaborating with the Baker Institute’s Professor Murray Esler, demonstrated that the NET gene could be re-activated by using the FDA approved drug Vorinostat in blood cells derived from POTS study participants.

“The rationale behind our research into POTS was to understand the regulatory mechanism to piece together some of the key molecules involved in NET gene reactivation,” Professor El-Osta said. “The drug we used in the study targets specific molecules in the cell to restore NET gene function.”

POTS is a relatively rare condition but the findings may have far wider application.

“This has important therapeutic implications,” Professor El-Osta said. “We have commenced clinical epigenomics studies to assess the generality of the mechanism and therapeutic potential as it pertains to essential hypertension, panic disorder and depressive illness.”

Professor El-Osta is now working with Professor Esler’s team, which is recruiting patients for a much larger study to test the broader application of the compounds investigated, and others like it, that may also reactivate the NET gene. 

Dr Khan is doing further postdoctoral work in Stockholm.

Khan AW, Ziemann M, Corcoran S, Harikrishnan KN, Okabe J, Rafehi H, Maxwell SS, Esler MD, El-Osta A. NET silencing by let-7i in postural tachycardia syndrome. JCI Insight. 2017; 2 (6):e90183. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.90183

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