Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Visinin-like protein 1 disrupts calcium homeostasis and promotes atrial fibrillation in human and rodent models.
- Journal:
- Signal transduction and targeted therapy
- Year:
- 2026
- Authors:
- Xiong, Ke et al.
- Affiliation:
- State Key Laboratory of Cardiovascular Diseases and Department of Cardiology · China
- Species:
- rodent
Abstract
Atrial fibrillation (AF), the most prevalent sustained cardiac arrhythmia, is closely linked to disturbed intracellular Cahomeostasis. Visinin-like protein 1 (VILIP-1), newly identified in cardiomyocytes, has been implicated in modulating Casignaling, yet its role in AF remains undefined. In this study, we integrated bulk RNA sequencing, single-cell transcriptomics, and electrophysiological profiling from human AF patients and rodent AF models to identify VILIP-1 as a key mediator of Cadysregulation in AF. VILIP-1 was significantly upregulated in atrial tissues from AF patients and in pacing-induced rat AF models, with enhanced membrane localization in cardiomyocytes. Atrial cardiomyocyte-specific overexpression of VILIP-1 led to pathological Caleakage, promoting delayed afterdepolarizations (DADs) and action potential duration (APD) alternans, which fostered AF substrate formation and increased arrhythmia susceptibility. Mechanistically, VILIP-1 augmented the surface abundance of sodium-calcium exchanger 1 (NCX-1) via a myristoylation-dependent trafficking mechanism, thereby disrupting Cahandling and initiating AF. Pharmacologically, repaglinide and desloratadine, two FDA-approved drugs that identified to target VILIP-1 or its myristoylation, attenuated AF susceptibility by reducing NCX-1 surface expression and restoring intracellular Cahomeostasis. Collectively, our findings define VILIP-1 as a critical upstream modulator of atrial Cahomeostasis and establish it as a promising therapeutic target for AF, with efficacy validated in human and rodent models.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41872178/