4.5 Article

New population-based exome data are questioning the pathogenicity of previously cardiomyopathy-associated genetic variants

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 21, Issue 9, Pages 918-928

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ejhg.2012.283

Keywords

cardiomyopathy; exome; next-generation sequencing; HCM; DCM; ARVC

Funding

  1. Danish National Research Foundation Centre for Cardiac Arrhythmia
  2. John and Birthe Meyer Foundation
  3. Research Foundation of the Heart Centre Rigshospitalet
  4. Arvid Nilsson Foundation
  5. Fondsborsvekselerer Henry Hansen og Hustru Karla Hansen
  6. fodt Westergaards Legat
  7. Research Foundation at Rigshospitalet
  8. Direktor Ib Henriksens fond
  9. Villadsen Family Foundation

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Cardiomyopathies are a heterogeneous group of diseases with various etiologies. We focused on three genetically determined cardiomyopathies: hypertrophic (HCM), dilated (DCM), and arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC). Eighty-four genes have so far been associated with these cardiomyopathies, but the disease-causing effect of reported variants is often dubious. In order to identify possible false-positive variants, we investigated the prevalence of previously reported cardiomyopathy-associated variants in recently published exome data. We searched for reported missense and nonsense variants in the NHLBI-Go Exome Sequencing Project (ESP) containing exome data from 6500 individuals. In ESP, we identified 94 variants out of 687 (14%) variants previously associated with HCM, 58 out of 337 (17%) variants associated with DCM, and 38 variants out of 209 (18%) associated with ARVC. These findings correspond to a genotype prevalence of 1:4 for HCM, 1:6 for DCM, and 1: 5 for ARVC. PolyPhen-2 predictions were conducted on all previously published cardiomyopathy-associated missense variants. We found significant overrepresentation of variants predicted as being benign among those present in ESP compared with the ones not present. In order to validate our findings, seven variants associated with cardiomyopathy were genotyped in a control population and this revealed frequencies comparable with the ones found in ESP. In conclusion, we identified genotype prevalences up to more than one thousand times higher than expected from the phenotype prevalences in the general population (HCM 1:500, DCM 1:2500, and ARVC 1:5000) and our data suggest that a high number of these variants are not monogenic causes of cardiomyopathy.

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