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Prognostic implications of troponin T variations in inherited cardiomyopathies using systems biology

Authors :
Rameen Shakur
Juan Pablo Ochoa
Alan J. Robinson
Abhishek Niroula
Aneesh Chandran
Taufiq Rahman
Mauno Vihinen
Lorenzo Monserrat
Source :
npj Genomic Medicine, Vol 6, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2021.

Abstract

Abstract The cardiac troponin T variations have often been used as an example of the application of clinical genotyping for prognostication and risk stratification measures for the management of patients with a family history of sudden cardiac death or familial cardiomyopathy. Given the disparity in patient outcomes and therapy options, we investigated the impact of variations on the intermolecular interactions across the thin filament complex as an example of an unbiased systems biology method to better define clinical prognosis to aid future management options. We present a novel unbiased dynamic model to define and analyse the functional, structural and physico-chemical consequences of genetic variations among the troponins. This was subsequently integrated with clinical data from accessible global multi-centre systematic reviews of familial cardiomyopathy cases from 106 articles of the literature: 136 disease-causing variations pertaining to 981 global clinical cases. Troponin T variations showed distinct pathogenic hotspots for dilated and hypertrophic cardiomyopathies; considering the causes of cardiovascular death separately, there was a worse survival in terms of sudden cardiac death for patients with a variation at regions 90–129 and 130–179 when compared to amino acids 1–89 and 200–288. Our data support variations among 90–130 as being a hotspot for sudden cardiac death and the region 131–179 for heart failure death/transplantation outcomes wherein the most common phenotype was dilated cardiomyopathy. Survival analysis into regions of high risk (regions 90–129 and 130–180) and low risk (regions 1–89 and 200–288) was significant for sudden cardiac death (p = 0.011) and for heart failure death/transplant (p = 0.028). Our integrative genomic, structural, model from genotype to clinical data integration has implications for enhancing clinical genomics methodologies to improve risk stratification.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Genetics
QH426-470

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20567944
Volume :
6
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
npj Genomic Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.83b655e70d2430db526ecf35be2769f
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41525-021-00204-w