A rising titan: TTN review and mutation update.

Hum Mutat

Inserm, U787 Myology Group, Institut de Myologie, Groupe Hospitalier Pitié-Salpêtrière, Paris, France; UPMC, UMR787, Paris, France.

Published: September 2014

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The TTN gene, which is the largest known gene with 364 exons, encodes the titin protein that is crucial for the structure and function of both cardiac and skeletal muscles; its complexity made it hard to study before next-generation sequencing (NGS) technology.
  • - With the advent of NGS, 127 disease-causing mutations in the TTN gene have now been identified, linked to various conditions such as cardiomyopathies and skeletal muscle diseases, revolutionizing our understanding of titinopathies.
  • - The review highlights challenges in interpreting TTN mutations due to their presence in healthy individuals, the variety of titin isoforms, and different reference sequences, emphasizing the need for ongoing research to connect

Article Abstract

The 364 exon TTN gene encodes titin (TTN), the largest known protein, which plays key structural, developmental, mechanical, and regulatory roles in cardiac and skeletal muscles. Prior to next-generation sequencing (NGS), routine analysis of the whole TTN gene was impossible due to its giant size and complexity. Thus, only a few TTN mutations had been reported and the general incidence and spectrum of titinopathies was significantly underestimated. In the last months, due to the widespread use of NGS, TTN is emerging as a major gene in human-inherited disease. So far, 127 TTN disease-causing mutations have been reported in patients with at least 10 different conditions, including isolated cardiomyopathies, purely skeletal muscle phenotypes, or infantile diseases affecting both types of striated muscles. However, the identification of TTN variants in virtually every individual from control populations, as well as the multiplicity of TTN isoforms and reference sequences used, stress the difficulties in assessing the relevance, inheritance, and correlation with the phenotype of TTN sequence changes. In this review, we provide the first comprehensive update of the TTN mutations reported and discuss their distribution, molecular mechanisms, associated phenotypes, transmission pattern, and phenotype-genotype correlations, alongside with their implications for basic research and for human health.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/humu.22611DOI Listing

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