Missense variants in the spectrin repeat domain of DSP are associated with arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy: A family report and systematic review.
Steffany GrondinAvedis-Christ WazirianPaloma JordaDonato G TerroneJohannie GagnonLaura RobbJulie AmyotLena RivardSylvain PagéMario TalajicJulia Cadrin-TourignyRafik TadrosPublished in: American journal of medical genetics. Part A (2020)
Rare loss of function variants in DSP, which codes for the desmosomal protein desmoplakin, have been implicated in dilated and arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathies. We present a family with arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy associated with a novel missense variant in DSP (NM_004415.4): c.877G>A, p.(Glu293Lys). The phenotype is characterized by predominant involvement of the left ventricle with systolic dysfunction, fibrosis, and life-threatening arrhythmias. We performed a systematic review of literature collecting all cardiomyopathy cases with rare missense variants in DSP. We demonstrate that the distribution of missense variants across the protein domains in cardiomyopathy cases differs from that in gnomAD (p = .04), with a case enrichment of rare missense variants in the spectrin repeat domain (36/78 [46%] in cases vs. 449/1495 [30%] in gnomAD; p = .004). Our findings highlight the predominance of cardiac arrhythmia and left ventricular involvement in desmoplakin cardiomyopathy and pinpoint to a potential mutation hotspot in DSP thereby facilitating missense variant interpretation in the diagnostic setting.
Keyphrases
- intellectual disability
- heart failure
- copy number
- left ventricular
- systematic review
- blood pressure
- autism spectrum disorder
- mitral valve
- acute myocardial infarction
- photodynamic therapy
- pulmonary hypertension
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- gene expression
- atrial fibrillation
- dna methylation
- genome wide
- cardiac resynchronization therapy
- left atrial
- congenital heart disease
- transcatheter aortic valve replacement
- acute coronary syndrome