BACKGROUND: Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common inherited cardiac disease (1/500) and the most common cause of sudden cardiac death in young people. Pathogenic mutation detection of HCM is having a growing impact on the medical management of patients and their families. However, the remarkable genetic and allelic heterogeneity makes molecular analysis by conventional methods very time-consuming, expensive and difficult to realise in a routine diagnostic molecular laboratory. METHOD AND RESULTS: The authors used their custom DNA resequencing array which interrogates all possible single-nucleotide variants on both strands of all exons (n=160), splice sites and 5'-untranslated region of 12 HCM genes (27 000 nucleotides). The results for 122 unrelated patients with HCM are presented. Thirty-three known or novel potentially pathogenic heterozygous single-nucleotide variants were identified in 38 patients (31%) in genes MYH7, MYBPC3, TNNT2, TNNI3, TPM1, MYL3 and ACTC1. CONCLUSIONS: Although next-generation sequencing will replace all large-scale sequencing platforms for inherited cardiac disorders in the near future, this HCM resequencing array is currently the most rapid, cost-effective and reasonably efficient technology for first-tier mutation screening of HCM in clinical practice. Because of its design, the array is also an appropriate tool for initial screening of other inherited forms of cardiomyopathy.
BACKGROUND:Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common inherited cardiac disease (1/500) and the most common cause of sudden cardiac death in young people. Pathogenic mutation detection of HCM is having a growing impact on the medical management of patients and their families. However, the remarkable genetic and allelic heterogeneity makes molecular analysis by conventional methods very time-consuming, expensive and difficult to realise in a routine diagnostic molecular laboratory. METHOD AND RESULTS: The authors used their custom DNA resequencing array which interrogates all possible single-nucleotide variants on both strands of all exons (n=160), splice sites and 5'-untranslated region of 12 HCM genes (27 000 nucleotides). The results for 122 unrelated patients with HCM are presented. Thirty-three known or novel potentially pathogenic heterozygous single-nucleotide variants were identified in 38 patients (31%) in genes MYH7, MYBPC3, TNNT2, TNNI3, TPM1, MYL3 and ACTC1. CONCLUSIONS: Although next-generation sequencing will replace all large-scale sequencing platforms for inherited cardiac disorders in the near future, this HCM resequencing array is currently the most rapid, cost-effective and reasonably efficient technology for first-tier mutation screening of HCM in clinical practice. Because of its design, the array is also an appropriate tool for initial screening of other inherited forms of cardiomyopathy.
Authors: Sinead L Murphy; Jason H Anderson; Jamie D Kapplinger; Teresa M Kruisselbrink; Bernard J Gersh; Steve R Ommen; Michael J Ackerman; J Martijn Bos Journal: J Cardiovasc Transl Res Date: 2016-02-25 Impact factor: 4.132
Authors: Jiří Bonaventura; Patricia Norambuena; Pavel Votýpka; Hana Hnátová; Radka Adlová; Milan Macek; Josef Veselka Journal: Cardiovasc Diagn Ther Date: 2020-04
Authors: Paal Skytt Andersen; Paula Louise Hedley; Stephen P Page; Petros Syrris; Johanna Catharina Moolman-Smook; William John McKenna; Perry Mark Elliott; Michael Christiansen Journal: Biochem Res Int Date: 2012-04-11