Characterization of clinically relevant copy-number variants from exomes of patients with inherited heart disease and unexplained sudden cardiac death

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Abstract

Purpose: Copy-number variant (CNV) analysis is increasingly performed in genetic diagnostics. We leveraged recent gene curation efforts and technical standards for interpretation and reporting of CNVs to characterize clinically relevant CNVs in patients with inherited heart disease and sudden cardiac death. Methods: Exome sequencing data were analyzed for CNVs using eXome-Hidden Markov Model tool in 48 established disease genes. CNV breakpoint junctions were characterized. CNVs were classified using the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics technical standards. Results: We identified eight CNVs in 690 unrelated probands (1.2%). Characterization of breakpoint junctions revealed nonhomologous end joining was responsible for four deletions, whereas one duplication was caused by nonallelic homologous recombination between duplicated sequences in MYH6 and MYH7. Identifying the precise breakpoint junctions determined the genomic involvement and proved useful for interpreting the clinical relevance of CNVs. Three large deletions involving TTN, MYBPC3, and KCNH2 were classified as pathogenic in three patients. Haplotype analysis of a deletion in ACTN2, found in two families, suggests the deletion was caused by an ancestral event. Conclusion: CNVs infrequently cause inherited heart diseases and should be investigated when standard genetic testing does not reveal a genetic diagnosis.

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Singer, E. S., Ross, S. B., Skinner, J. R., Weintraub, R. G., Ingles, J., Semsarian, C., & Bagnall, R. D. (2021). Characterization of clinically relevant copy-number variants from exomes of patients with inherited heart disease and unexplained sudden cardiac death. Genetics in Medicine, 23(1), 86–93. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41436-020-00970-5

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