Literature DB >> 25163546

Atlas of the clinical genetics of human dilated cardiomyopathy.

Jan Haas1, Karen S Frese1, Barbara Peil2, Wanda Kloos3, Andreas Keller4, Rouven Nietsch1, Zhu Feng3, Sabine Müller4, Elham Kayvanpour1, Britta Vogel3, Farbod Sedaghat-Hamedani1, Wei-Keat Lim5, Xiaohong Zhao5, Dmitriy Fradkin5, Doreen Köhler3, Simon Fischer3, Jennifer Franke3, Sabine Marquart1, Ioana Barb1, Daniel Tian Li1, Ali Amr1, Philipp Ehlermann3, Derliz Mereles1, Tanja Weis1, Sarah Hassel1, Andreas Kremer6, Vanessa King5, Emil Wirsz7, Richard Isnard8, Michel Komajda8, Alessandra Serio9, Maurizia Grasso9, Petros Syrris10, Eleanor Wicks10, Vincent Plagnol10, Luis Lopes10, Tenna Gadgaard11, Hans Eiskjær11, Mads Jørgensen12, Diego Garcia-Giustiniani13, Martin Ortiz-Genga13, Maria G Crespo-Leiro14, Rondal H Lekanne Dit Deprez15, Imke Christiaans15, Ingrid A van Rijsingen15, Arthur A Wilde15, Anders Waldenstrom16, Martino Bolognesi17, Riccardo Bellazzi18, Stellan Mörner16, Justo Lorenzo Bermejo2, Lorenzo Monserrat19, Eric Villard8, Jens Mogensen20, Yigal M Pinto15, Philippe Charron8, Perry Elliott10, Eloisa Arbustini9, Hugo A Katus21, Benjamin Meder22.   

Abstract

AIM: Numerous genes are known to cause dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM). However, until now technological limitations have hindered elucidation of the contribution of all clinically relevant disease genes to DCM phenotypes in larger cohorts. We now utilized next-generation sequencing to overcome these limitations and screened all DCM disease genes in a large cohort. METHODS AND
RESULTS: In this multi-centre, multi-national study, we have enrolled 639 patients with sporadic or familial DCM. To all samples, we applied a standardized protocol for ultra-high coverage next-generation sequencing of 84 genes, leading to 99.1% coverage of the target region with at least 50-fold and a mean read depth of 2415. In this well characterized cohort, we find the highest number of known cardiomyopathy mutations in plakophilin-2, myosin-binding protein C-3, and desmoplakin. When we include yet unknown but predicted disease variants, we find titin, plakophilin-2, myosin-binding protein-C 3, desmoplakin, ryanodine receptor 2, desmocollin-2, desmoglein-2, and SCN5A variants among the most commonly mutated genes. The overlap between DCM, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), and channelopathy causing mutations is considerably high. Of note, we find that >38% of patients have compound or combined mutations and 12.8% have three or even more mutations. When comparing patients recruited in the eight participating European countries we find remarkably little differences in mutation frequencies and affected genes.
CONCLUSION: This is to our knowledge, the first study that comprehensively investigated the genetics of DCM in a large-scale cohort and across a broad gene panel of the known DCM genes. Our results underline the high analytical quality and feasibility of Next-Generation Sequencing in clinical genetic diagnostics and provide a sound database of the genetic causes of DCM. Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved.
© The Author 2014. For permissions please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cardiomyopathy; Diagnosis; Genetics; Patients

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25163546     DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehu301

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur Heart J        ISSN: 0195-668X            Impact factor:   29.983


  159 in total

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2.  Pathway-based variant enrichment analysis on the example of dilated cardiomyopathy.

Authors:  Christina Backes; Benjamin Meder; Alan Lai; Monika Stoll; Frank Rühle; Hugo A Katus; Andreas Keller
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Review 8.  Genotype-phenotype associations in dilated cardiomyopathy: meta-analysis on more than 8000 individuals.

Authors:  Elham Kayvanpour; Farbod Sedaghat-Hamedani; Ali Amr; Alan Lai; Jan Haas; Daniel B Holzer; Karen S Frese; Andreas Keller; Katrin Jensen; Hugo A Katus; Benjamin Meder
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Review 9.  Allelic imbalance and haploinsufficiency in MYBPC3-linked hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.

Authors:  Amelia A Glazier; Andrea Thompson; Sharlene M Day
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Review 10.  Intercalated discs: cellular adhesion and signaling in heart health and diseases.

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