4.2 Article

Gender- and age-related differences in distinct phenotypes of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy-associated mutation MYBPC3-E334K

Journal

HEART AND VESSELS
Volume 36, Issue 10, Pages 1525-1535

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00380-021-01834-x

Keywords

MYBPC3– E334K; Gender differences; Incomplete penetrance; Phenotype– genotype correlation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81901755, 81974014, 81470452, 82071932]
  2. Shaanxi Provincial Key Project [2017ZDXM-SF-058]
  3. Key R&D Project of Shaanxi Province [2019KW-076]
  4. Discipline Promotion Project of Xijing Hospital [XJZT19MJ01, XJZT18Z03]

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The research identified the mutation MYBPC3-E334K as a culprit of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, with conflicting pathogenicity, potential for asymptomatic carriers, and higher penetrance in male patients. The study suggests that patients with single-mutation MYBPC3-E334K exhibit incomplete penetrance, and a second sarcomere variant does not show obvious cumulative effects.
The mutation MYBPC3-E334K is a culprit mutation of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). The pathogenicity of MYBPC3-E334K is conflicting in ClinVar because of the limited segregation data and the relatively high frequency in gnomAD (0.03% overall, with 0.3% in East Asians and 0.8% in Japanese). The main aim is to clarify the clinical importance and phenotype-genotype correlations in subjects with or without MYBPC3-E334K alone. The prevalence of MYBPC3-E334K was sequenced in 1017 HCM unrelated probands. The clinical features, morphology phenotypes, and electrical phenotypes were further analyzed according to the phenotype and genotype status in families with single-mutation MYBPC3-E334K. Nine of 1017 (0.88%) unrelated HCM probands were detected harboring MYBPC3-E334K, and three of them harbored a second variant in sarcomere protein gene. Family study and co-segregation analyses indicated that patients with single-mutation MYBPC3-E334K showed autosomal dominant mode of inheritance with incomplete penetrance. The overall disease penetrance was 52.6%, and the disease penetrance was higher in males than in females (100% in men vs 25% in women, p = 0.003). The mean age at diagnosis of males was approximately 25 years younger than females (36.57 +/- 18.65 vs 62.33 +/- 12.10, p = 0.062). The variant MYBPC3-E334K was classified as a likely pathogenic variant, and a second sarcomere variant did not reveal obvious cumulative effects. The patients harboring single-mutation MYBPC3-E334K had incomplete penetrance, and males demonstrated higher penetrance and early onset HCM than females. A second sarcomere variant did not reveal obvious cumulative effects.

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