4.6 Article

Combining whole exome sequencing with in silico analysis and clinical data to identify candidate variants in pediatric left ventricular noncompaction

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY
Volume 347, Issue -, Pages 29-37

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2021.11.001

Keywords

Noncompaction; Cardiomyopathy; Rare variant; Whole exome sequencing; Multigenic

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01HL53392, R01HL116906, R01HL151438]

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This study identified a variety of variants contributing to left ventricular noncompaction syndrome through family research, with some being novel. In some families, the variants carried by patients lead to severe LVNC, while in others, the variants only cause mild trabeculation of the myocardium.
Background: Understanding the overall variant burden in pediatric patients with left ventricular noncompaction (LVNC) has clinical implications. Whole exome sequencing (WES) allows detection of coding variants in both candidate cardiomyopathy genes and those included on commercial panels. Other lines of evidence, including in silico analysis, are necessary to reduce the overwhelming number of variants to those most likely having a phenotypic impact. Methods: Five families, including five pediatric probands with LVNC, 5 other affected, and 10 unaffected family members, had WES performed, followed by bioinformatics filtering and Sanger sequencing. Review of the HGMD, variant classification by ACMG guidelines, and clinical information were used to further refine complex genotypes. Results: One nonsense and eleven missense variants were identified. In Family 1, affected siblings carried digenic heterozygous variants: E1350K-MYH7 and A276V-ANKRD1. The proband also carried heterozygous W143XNRG1. Four affected members of Family 2 carried K184Q-MYH7 while unaffected members did not. In Family 3, homozygous A161T-MYH7 and heterozygous P4935T-OBSCN variants were identified in the proband with the latter being absent in his unaffected brother. In Family 4, proband's father and half-sibling have mild hypertrabeculation and carry T3796I-PLEC. The proband, carrying T3796I-PLEC and V2878A-OBSCN, demonstrated higher trabeculation burden. The proband in Family 5 carried four variants, R3247W-PLEC, C92Y-ERG, T1233MNCOR2, and E54K-HIST1H4B. Application of ACMG criteria and clinical data revealed that W143X-NRG1, P4935T-OBSCN, and V2878A-OBSCN likely have no phenotypic role. Conclusions: We report nine variants, including novel T3796I-PLEC and biallelic A161T-MYH7, likely contributing to phenotypes ranging from asymptomatic hypertrabeculation to severe LVNC with heart failure.

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