| Literature DB >> 23494605 |
Etsuko Fujita1, Toshio Nakanishi, Tsutomu Nishizawa, Nobuhisa Hagiwara, Rumiko Matsuoka.
Abstract
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is an autosomal dominant disorder resulting from mutations in genes for at least 15 various sarcomere-related proteins including cardiac β-myosin heavy chain, cardiac myosin-binding protein C, and cardiac troponin T. The troponin T gene (TNNT2) mutation has the third incidence of familial HCM, and the genotype-phenotype correlation of this gene still remains insufficient in Japanese familial HCM. Therefore, in the present study, we focused on screening the TNNT2 mutation in 173 unrelated Japanese patients with familial HCM, and found three reported mutations and a new mutation of TNNT2 in 11 individuals from four families. In these families, two individuals from one family had double mutations, Arg130Cys and Phe110Ile, six individuals from two other families had an Arg92Trp mutation, and one individual of another family had a new mutation, Ile79Thr, of TNNT2. The phenotype of each family was often different from reported cases, even if they had the same genetic mutation. In addition, families with the same genetic mutation showed a similar trend in the phenotype, but it was not exactly the same. However, sudden death in youth was observed in all of these families. Although the type of genetic mutation is not useful for predicting prognosis in HCM, the possibility of sudden cardiac death remains. Therefore, the prognosis of individuals bearing the TNNT2 mutation with familial HCM should be more carefully observed from birth.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23494605 PMCID: PMC3830204 DOI: 10.1007/s00380-013-0332-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart Vessels ISSN: 0910-8327 Impact factor: 2.037
Primers used for amplification of fragments from TNNT2
| Exon | Forward (5′–3′) | Reverse (5′–3′) |
|---|---|---|
| 2 | GAGCTCTTCTGAGGAAGGCA | CTACCCAGAATCCGAGGGAC |
| 3 and 4 | CAGGGCAGCGTGGACTCCC | CCCAGGGCTCCCAGGATTT |
| 5 | CCATTCTCTGCTCTGGGTTC | GTGCACATGGGAAAGCTGTTCT |
| 6 | TAGGGCTTATCTGTGGGGAAGGC | CTTCCCTGGAAAGAGCACTG |
| 7 | GAAATGGAAATCCACAGGGA | TACTGCACCCCGTTCCATCA |
| 8 and 9 | CTCTAGGAAGGATCAGGGCCC | CTCACAAAAGGGATGGAGGA |
| 10 | GCGATGTCACCTTCTCCCTA | CACCGCACCCGGCCAATA |
| 11 | GGTTTCCAATCCTTTCCCCTAA | GCTGCAGTGGACACCTCATTC |
| 12 | GCCTTTGTCTTCCTGCCTTCTC | CAGCCAGCCCAATCTCTTCACT |
| 13 | ACAGGGAGGGGGCAATCTGGCC | CCCAGAGCAGATGCGGGCAGTG |
| 14 | ACTGGGTGCTGCCGTCTGGTC | AAGGGGGCTGTTGGGGAATAGG |
| 15 | CACTCAGCCCCCTTCTCC | AAGCTTCTCCGCCCCACATTTC |
| 16 | GGCACCCCAGTCCTACCC | GTCCCCCTCAACAGCACTTTT |
Clinical features of patients with TNNT2 mutation in families A, B, C, and D
| HCM individuals | A III-2 | A III-1 | A II-6 | A II-6′ (III-2/mother) | B III-7 | B III-2 | B IV-3 | C IV-3 | C III-3 | C II-3 | D III-2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exon | 9 and 10 | 9 and 10 | 9 | 10 | 9 | 9 | 9 | 10 | 10 | 10 | 8 |
| Nucleotide substitution | T328A and C388T | T328A and C388T | T328A | C388T | C274 | C274 | C274 | C388 | C388 | C388 | T236C |
| Amino substitution | P110I and R130C | P110I and R130C | P110I | R130C | R92W | R92W | R92W | R92W | R92W | R92W | I79T |
| Sex | F | M | M | F | F | M | M | F | F | F | F |
| Age (years) | 12 | 14 | 55 | 46 | 35 | 41 | 2 | 42 | 15 | 80 | 25 |
| Outcome (years) | 12, Vf survivor | 14, died suddenly | 24, Vf survivor | ||||||||
| Clinical diagnosis | HCM | HCM | CAVB, PMI | Normal | DHCM (HCM) | Abnormal ECG | HCM | HCM | HCM | HCM | HCM |
| Electrocardiogram | SR + CRBBB | SR + CRBBB, abnQ | PM rhythm (CAVB) | WNL | R-wave progression | Details unknown | RVH, deep Q | LVH, ST dep | Details unknown | Details unknown | ST dep, inv T |
| 2D echocardiogram | LVH, ASH | LVH, ASH | LVH | WNL | LVH, apical hypertrophy | Details unknown | LVH | LVH, ASH | LVH | Details unknown | LVH, ASH |
| Cardiac catheterization | LV relaxation abnormalities | LV relaxation abnormalities | LV relaxation abnormalities | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND | ND |
HCM hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, HOCM hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy, DHCM dilated phase of HCM, LVH left ventricular hypertrophy, Vf ventricular fibrillation, CAVB complete atrioventricular block, SR sinus rhythm, CRBBB complete right bundle branch block, abnQ abnormal Q wave, LVH left ventricular hypertrophy, RVH right ventricular hypertrophy, ST dep ST depression, inv T inversion T, PMI pacemaker implantation, ECG electrocardiogram, ASH asymmetric septal hypertrophy, APH apical hypertrophy, ND not determined, WNL within normal limits
Fig. 1Pedigree and phenotype of Family A. Pedigree with three generations (Roman Numerals), the propositus is denoted by an arrow. Further clinical data for family members is detailed in the table. HCM hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, CAVB complete atrioventricular block, PMI pacemaker implantation, CRBBB complete right bundle-branch block, Vf ventricular fibrillation
Fig. 2Pedigree and phenotype of Family B. Pedigree with four generations (Roman Numerals), the propositus is denoted by an arrow. Further clinical data for family members is detailed in the table. HCM hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, HOCM hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy, ECG electrocardiogram
Fig. 3Pedigree and phenotype of Family C. Pedigree with four generations (Roman Numerals), the propositus is denoted by an arrow. Further clinical data for family members is detailed in the table. HCM hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, WPW syndrome Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome
Fig. 4Pedigree and phenotype of Family D. Pedigree with four generations (Roman Numerals), the propositus is denoted by an arrow. Further clinical data for family members is detailed in the table. HCM hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, Vf ventricular fibrillation
Fig. 5a The new Ile79Thr mutation of TNNT2 (Exon 8). b The position of the 79th Ile codes for the binding site of tropomyosin. This domain is well preserved in mammals
Fig. 6a The deletion/deletion (D/D) polymorphism. b The insertion/insertion (I/I) polymorphism. c The insertion/deletion (I/D) polymorphism