
Absence of a primary role for TTN missense variants in arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy: From a clinical and pathological perspective
Author(s) -
Chen Kai,
Song Jiangping,
Wang Zhen,
Rao Man,
Chen Liang,
Hu Shengshou
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
clinical cardiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.263
H-Index - 72
eISSN - 1932-8737
pISSN - 0160-9289
DOI - 10.1002/clc.22906
Subject(s) - missense mutation , medicine , cardiomyopathy , ventricle , pathological , arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia , heart transplantation , transplantation , coronary artery disease , gastroenterology , pathology , cardiology , phenotype , heart failure , genetics , gene , biology
Background Arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy (ACM) is an inheritable heart disease characterized by fibro‐fatty replacement of the myocardium. TTN missense variants were previously reported as a pathogenic factor for ACM. Hypothesis TTN missense variants are commonly identified in ACM, but have limited effect on the phenotype of ACM. Methods We sequenced 15 ACM‐related genes in 35 patients who had a heart transplantation and quantified myocardium, and fibrous and adipose tissue in blocks of the explanted heart. Clinical and pathological characteristics were compared between patients with TTN variants and others. Pedigree analysis was performed in 3 families with TTN variants. Results TTN variants were detected in 11 patients (all missense, 9 heterozygous and 2 oligogenic form). The TTN truncating variant was absent in the cohort. Patients with TTN variants had late onset age of the disease (31 ±13 years vs 17 ±3 years, P = 0.049) and age of heart transplantation (41 ±14 years vs 24 ±9 years, P = 0.027), larger left ventricle end‐diastolic diameter (62 ±10 mm vs 45 ±10 mm, P = 0.019), smaller right ventricular outflow tract (34 ±14 mm vs 50 ±15 mm, P = 0.046), more myocardium (40.8% ±29.4% vs 13.8% ±11.0%, P = 0.017), and less adipose tissue (43.0% ±30.9% vs 66.9% ±18.5%, P = 0.036) in right ventricle than those with desmosomal variants. There was few difference between patients with TTN variants and those without variants. Pedigrees showed none of the family members with TTN missense variants had a disease phenotype, indicating a very low penetrance. Conclusions TTN missense variants was commonly identified in ACM patients in this cohort, but hardly played a primary role in ACM as causative variants.