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Reevaluation of the South Asian MYBPC3Δ25bp Intronic Deletion in Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

Authors :
Andrew R. Harper
Michael Bowman
Jesse B.G. Hayesmoore
Helen Sage
Silvia Salatino
Edward Blair
Carolyn Campbell
Bethany Currie
Anuj Goel
Karen McGuire
Elizabeth Ormondroyd
Kate Sergeant
Adam Waring
Jessica Woodley
Christopher M. Kramer
Stefan Neubauer
Martin Farrall
Hugh Watkins
Kate L. Thomson
Theodore Abraham
Lisa Anderson
Evan Appelbaum
Camillo Autore
Colin Berry
Elena Biagini
William Bradlow
Chiara Bucciarelli-Ducci
Amedeo Chiribiri
Lubna Choudhury
Andrew Crean
Dana Dawson
Milind Y. Desai
Eleanor Elstein
Andrew Flett
Matthias Friedrich
Stephen Heitner
Adam Helms
Carolyn Ho
Daniel L. Jacoby
Han Kim
Bette Kim
Eric Larose
Masliza Mahmod
Heiko Mahrholdt
Martin Maron
Gerry McCann
Michelle Michaels
Saidi Mohiddin
Sherif Nagueh
David Newby
Iacopo Olivotto
Anjali Owens
F. Pierre-Mongeon
Sanjay Prasad
Ornella Rimoldi
Michael Salerno
Jeanette Schulz-Menger
Mark Sherrid
Peter Swoboda
Albert van Rossum
Jonathan Weinsaft
James White
Eric Williamson
Source :
Circulation. Genomic and Precision Medicine, Circ Genom Precis Med
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2020.

Abstract

Supplemental Digital Content is available in the text.<br />Background: The common intronic deletion, MYBPC3Δ25, detected in 4% to 8% of South Asian populations, is reported to be associated with cardiomyopathy, with ≈7-fold increased risk of disease in variant carriers. Here, we examine the contribution of MYBPC3Δ25 to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) in a large patient cohort. Methods: Sequence data from 2 HCM cohorts (n=5393) was analyzed to determine MYBPC3Δ25 frequency and co-occurrence of pathogenic variants in HCM genes. Case-control and haplotype analyses were performed to compare variant frequencies and assess disease association. Analyses were also undertaken to investigate the pathogenicity of a candidate variant MYBPC3 c.1224-52G>A. Results: Our data suggest that the risk of HCM, previously attributed to MYBPC3Δ25, can be explained by enrichment of a derived haplotype, MYBPC3Δ25/−52, whereby a small subset of individuals bear both MYBPC3Δ25 and a rare pathogenic variant, MYBPC3 c.1224-52G>A. The intronic MYBPC3 c.1224-52G>A variant, which is not routinely evaluated by gene panel or exome sequencing, was detected in ≈1% of our HCM cohort. Conclusions: The MYBPC3 c.1224-52G>A variant explains the disease risk previously associated with MYBPC3Δ25 in the South Asian population and is one of the most frequent pathogenic variants in HCM in all populations; genotyping services should ensure coverage of this deep intronic mutation. Individuals carrying MYBPC3Δ25 alone are not at increased risk of HCM, and this variant should not be tested in isolation; this is important for the large majority of the 100 million individuals of South Asian ancestry who carry MYBPC3Δ25 and would previously have been declared at increased risk of HCM.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25748300
Volume :
13
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation. Genomic and Precision Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7f720bb1e32ea9ab957d9d283e6d64c0