4.7 Article

HCN4 Mutations in Multiple Families With Bradycardia and Left Ventricular Noncompaction Cardiomyopathy

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY
Volume 64, Issue 8, Pages 745-756

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2014.05.045

Keywords

exome sequencing; genetics; HCN4; ion channel; left ventricular noncompaction cardiomyopathy; sinus bradycardia

Funding

  1. Netherlands CardioVascular Research Initiative (DutchHeart Foundation)
  2. Netherlands CardioVascular Research Initiative (Dutch Federation of University Medical Centres)
  3. Netherlands CardioVascular Research Initiative (the Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development)
  4. Netherlands CardioVascular Research Initiative ( the Royal Netherlands Academy of Sciences)
  5. Netherlands Heart Foundation [2009B066]
  6. Netherlands Heart Institute (ICIN) [038.08]

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BACKGROUND Familial forms of primary sinus bradycardia have sometimes been attributed to mutations in HCN4, SCN5A, and ANK2. In these studies, no structural cardiac alterations were reported in mutation carriers. However, a cluster of reports in the literature describe patients presenting with sinus bradycardia in association with left ventricular noncompaction cardiomyopathy (LVNC), pointing to a shared genetic cause. OBJECTIVES This study sought to identify the genetic defect underlying the combined clinical presentation of bradycardia and LVNC, hypothesizing that these 2 clinical abnormalities have a common genetic cause. METHODS Exome sequencing was carried out in 2 cousins from the index family that were affected by the combined bradycardia-LVNC phenotype; shared variants thus identified were subsequently overlaid with the chromosomal regions shared among 5 affected family members that were identified using single nucleotide polymorphism array analysis. RESULTS The combined linkage analysis and exome sequencing in the index family identified 11 novel variants shared among the 2 affected cousins. One of these, p.Gly482Arg in HCN4, segregated with the combined bradycardia and LVNC phenotype in the entire family. Subsequent screening of HCN4 in 3 additional families with the same clinical combination of bradycardia and LVNC identified HCN4 mutations in each. In electrophysiological studies, all found HCN4 mutations showed a more negative voltage dependence of activation, consistent with the observed bradycardia. CONCLUSIONS Although mutations in HCN4 have been previously linked to bradycardia, our study provides the first evidence to our knowledge that mutations in this ion channel gene also may be associated with structural abnormalities of the myocardium. (C) 2014 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation.

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