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Biallelic loss-of-function in NRAP is a cause of recessive dilated cardiomyopathy

Authors :
Samuel Myllykangas
Julie Hathaway
Pia Dahlberg
Tero-Pekka Alastalo
Sini Weckström
Krista Heliö
Saija Ahonen
Tiia Kangas-Kontio
Mikko Muona
Massimiliano Gentile
Pertteli Salmenperä
Eija H. Seppälä
Sari Tuupanen
Tiina Heliö
Johanna Sistonen
Johanna Tommiska
Juha W. Koskenvuo
Inka Saarinen
Jennifer Schleit
Tiina Ojala
Ville Kytola
Ville Vepsäläinen
Anders Gummesson
Jussi Paananen
HUS Heart and Lung Center
Helsinki University Hospital Area
University of Helsinki
Clinicum
Children's Hospital
HUS Children and Adolescents
Department of Medicine
University of Helsinki, HUS Heart and Lung Center
University of Helsinki, University of Helsinki
Source :
PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 16, Iss 2, p e0245681 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background Familial dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is typically a monogenic disorder with dominant inheritance. Although over 40 genes have been linked to DCM, more than half of the patients undergoing comprehensive genetic testing are left without molecular diagnosis. Recently, biallelic protein-truncating variants (PTVs) in the nebulin-related anchoring protein gene (NRAP) were identified in a few patients with sporadic DCM. Methods and results We determined the frequency of rare NRAP variants in a cohort of DCM patients and control patients to further evaluate role of this gene in cardiomyopathies. A retrospective analysis of our internal variant database consisting of 31,639 individuals who underwent genetic testing (either panel or direct exome sequencing) was performed. The DCM group included 577 patients with either a confirmed or suspected DCM diagnosis. A control cohort of 31,062 individuals, including 25,912 individuals with non-cardiac (control group) and 5,150 with non-DCM cardiac indications (Non-DCM cardiac group). Biallelic (n = 6) or two (n = 5) NRAP variants (two PTVs or PTV+missense) were identified in 11 unrelated probands with DCM (1.9%) but none of the controls. None of the 11 probands had an alternative molecular diagnosis. Family member testing supports co-segregation. Biallelic or potentially biallelic NRAP variants were enriched in DCM vs. controls (OR 1052, pNRAP PTVs in the gnomAD reference population, and predicting full penetrance, biallelic NRAP variants could explain 0.25%-2.46% of all DCM cases. Conclusion Loss-of-function in NRAP is a cause for autosomal recessive dilated cardiomyopathy, supporting its inclusion in comprehensive genetic testing.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 16, Iss 2, p e0245681 (2021)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ba81c9e7cc43c22f62715634c74af463