Whole Sequencing of Most Prevalent Dilated Cardiomyopathy-Causing Genes as a Molecular Strategy to Improve Molecular Diagnosis Efficiency?

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Abstract

Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is the most common form of cardiomyopathy and one of the most common causes of heart failure. TTN-truncating variants represent the most common cause of DCM. Similarly, among other prevalent DCM-causing genes, truncating variants were also frequently detected in BAG3, DSP, FLNC, and LMNA. For these four genes, the current study aims to determine the prevalence of deep intronic pathogenic variants that could lead to splice defects. A next-generation sequencing (NGS) workflow based on whole gene sequencing of BAG3, DSP, FLNC, and LMNA of a cohort of 95 DCM patients, for whom no putatively causative point mutations were identified after NGS of a panel of 48 cardiomyopathy-causing genes, was thus performed. Our approach did not lead us to reconsider the molecular diagnosis of any patient of the cohort. This study suggests that deep splice mutations do not account for a significant proportion of DCM cases. In contrast with MYBPC3 in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy cases, NGS of BAG3, DSP, FLNC, and LMNA whole intronic sequences would not significantly improve the efficiency of molecular diagnosis of DCM probands.

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Januel, L., Chanavat, V., Rollat-Farnier, P. A., Bardel, C., Nony, S., Millat, G., & Janin, A. (2021). Whole Sequencing of Most Prevalent Dilated Cardiomyopathy-Causing Genes as a Molecular Strategy to Improve Molecular Diagnosis Efficiency? DNA and Cell Biology, 40(3), 491–498. https://doi.org/10.1089/dna.2020.6305

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