Identification of as a Novel Gene Contributing to Dilated Cardiomyopathy.

Diagnostics (Basel)

Department of Cardiology, Shanghai Fifth People's Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai 200240, China.

Published: January 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is the most common cardiac muscle disease and a leading cause of heart failure and transplantation, with a significant genetic component that remains partially understood.
  • A study identified a new genetic variation in the BMP10 gene associated with autosomal-dominant DCM in a Chinese Han family, which was absent in a control group of healthy individuals.
  • Functional assays showed that the mutated BMP10 variant failed to activate key target genes related to DCM, suggesting it plays a crucial role in the disease and highlighting its potential for early genetic diagnosis and targeted prevention strategies.

Article Abstract

Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), characterized by left ventricular or biventricular enlargement with systolic dysfunction, is the most common type of cardiac muscle disease. It is a major cause of congestive heart failure and the most frequent indication for heart transplantation. Aggregating evidence has convincingly demonstrated that DCM has an underlying genetic basis, though the genetic defects responsible for DCM in a larger proportion of cases remain elusive, motivating the ongoing research for new DCM-causative genes. In the current investigation, a multigenerational family affected with autosomal-dominant DCM was recruited from the Chinese Han population. By whole-exome sequencing and Sanger sequencing analyses of the DNAs from the family members, a new BMP10 variation, NM_014482.3:c.166C > T;p.(Gln56*), was discovered and verified to be in co-segregation with the DCM phenotype in the entire family. The heterozygous BMP10 variant was not detected in 268 healthy volunteers enrolled as control subjects. The functional measurement via dual-luciferase reporter assay revealed that Gln56*-mutant BMP10 lost the ability to transactivate its target genes NKX2.5 and TBX20, two genes that had been causally linked to DCM. The findings strongly indicate BMP10 as a new gene contributing to DCM in humans and support BMP10 haploinsufficiency as an alternative pathogenic mechanism underpinning DCM, implying potential implications for the early genetic diagnosis and precision prophylaxis of DCM.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9857772PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13020242DOI Listing

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