AI Article Synopsis

  • Brugada syndrome (BrS) is a genetic disorder that can lead to sudden cardiac death, primarily linked to the SCN5A gene, but variations in other genes may also play a role.
  • A study identified 133 rare genetic variants related to BrS, with a deep analysis revealing that only six had a definitive pathogenic role, primarily in sodium channel-related genes.
  • The research suggests that the list of genes associated with BrS should be expanded to include SCN5A along with four minor genes: SLMAP, SEMA3A, SCNN1A, and SCN2B, emphasizing the need for careful genetic interpretation and clinical application of these findings.

Article Abstract

Brugada syndrome (BrS) is an inherited arrhythmogenic disease associated with sudden cardiac death. The main gene is SCN5A. Additional variants in 42 other genes have been reported as deleterious, although these variants have not yet received comprehensive pathogenic analysis. Our aim was to clarify the role of all currently reported variants in minor genes associated with BrS. We performed a comprehensive analysis according to the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics guidelines of published clinical and basic data on all genes (other than SCN5A) related to BrS. Our results identified 133 rare variants potentially associated with BrS. After applying current recommendations, only six variants (4.51%) show a conclusive pathogenic role. All definitively pathogenic variants were located in four genes encoding sodium channels or related proteins: SLMAP, SEMA3A, SCNN1A, and SCN2B. In total, 33.83% of variants in 19 additional genes were potentially pathogenic. Beyond SCN5A, we conclude definitive pathogenic variants associated with BrS in four minor genes. The current list of genes associated with BrS, therefore, should include SCN5A, SLMAP, SEMA3A, SCNN1A, and SCN2B. Comprehensive genetic interpretation and careful clinical translation should be done for all variants currently classified as potentially deleterious for BrS.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/humu.23730DOI Listing

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