Back to Search Start Over

Rare Coding Variants Associated With Electrocardiographic Intervals Identify Monogenic Arrhythmia Susceptibility Genes: A Multi-Ancestry Analysis.

Authors :
Choi SH
Jurgens SJ
Haggerty CM
Hall AW
Halford JL
Morrill VN
Weng LC
Lagerman B
Mirshahi T
Pettinger M
Guo X
Lin HJ
Alonso A
Soliman EZ
Kornej J
Lin H
Moscati A
Nadkarni GN
Brody JA
Wiggins KL
Cade BE
Lee J
Austin-Tse C
Blackwell T
Chaffin MD
Lee CJ
Rehm HL
Roselli C
Redline S
Mitchell BD
Sotoodehnia N
Psaty BM
Heckbert SR
Loos RJF
Vasan RS
Benjamin EJ
Correa A
Boerwinkle E
Arking DE
Rotter JI
Rich SS
Whitsel EA
Perez M
Kooperberg C
Fornwalt BK
Lunetta KL
Ellinor PT
Lubitz SA
Source :
Circulation. Genomic and precision medicine [Circ Genom Precis Med] 2021 Aug; Vol. 14 (4), pp. e003300. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Jul 28.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background: Alterations in electrocardiographic (ECG) intervals are well-known markers for arrhythmia and sudden cardiac death (SCD) risk. While the genetics of arrhythmia syndromes have been studied, relations between electrocardiographic intervals and rare genetic variation at a population level are poorly understood.<br />Methods: Using a discovery sample of 29 000 individuals with whole-genome sequencing from Trans-Omics in Precision Medicine and replication in nearly 100 000 with whole-exome sequencing from the UK Biobank and MyCode, we examined associations between low-frequency and rare coding variants with 5 routinely measured electrocardiographic traits (RR, P-wave, PR, and QRS intervals and corrected QT interval).<br />Results: We found that rare variants associated with population-based electrocardiographic intervals identify established monogenic SCD genes ( KCNQ1 , KCNH2 , and SCN5A ), a controversial monogenic SCD gene ( KCNE1 ), and novel genes ( PAM and MFGE8 ) involved in cardiac conduction. Loss-of-function and pathogenic SCN5A variants, carried by 0.1% of individuals, were associated with a nearly 6-fold increased odds of the first-degree atrioventricular block ( P =8.4×10 <superscript>-5</superscript> ). Similar variants in KCNQ1 and KCNH2 (0.2% of individuals) were associated with a 23-fold increased odds of marked corrected QT interval prolongation ( P =4×10 <superscript>-25</superscript> ), a marker of SCD risk. Incomplete penetrance of such deleterious variation was common as over 70% of carriers had normal electrocardiographic intervals.<br />Conclusions: Our findings indicate that large-scale high-depth sequence data and electrocardiographic analysis identifies monogenic arrhythmia susceptibility genes and rare variants with large effects. Known pathogenic variation in conventional arrhythmia and SCD genes exhibited incomplete penetrance and accounted for only a small fraction of marked electrocardiographic interval prolongation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2574-8300
Volume :
14
Issue :
4
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Circulation. Genomic and precision medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34319147
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCGEN.120.003300