Abstract

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a heart disorder caused by autosomal dominant alterations affecting both sarcomeric genes and other nonsarcomeric loci in a minority of cases. However, in some patients, the occurrence of the causal pathogenic variant or variants in homozygosity, compound heterozygosity, or double heterozygosity has also been described. Most of the HCM pathogenic variants are missense and unique, but truncating mutations of the MYBPC3 gene have been reported as founder pathogenic variants in populations from Finland, France, Japan, Iceland, Italy, and the Netherlands. This study aimed to assess the genetic background of HCM in a cohort of Polish patients. Twenty‑nine Polish patients were analyzed by a next generation sequencing panel including 404 cardiovascular genes. Pathogenic variants were found in 41% of the patients, with ultra‑ rare MYBPC3 c.2541C>G (p.Tyr847Ter) mutation standing for a variant hotspot and correlating with a lower age at HCM diagnosis. Among the nonsarcomeric genes, the CSRP3 mutation was found in a single case carrying the novel c.364C>T (p.Arg122Ter) variant in homozygosity. With this finding, the total number of known HCM cases with human CSRP3 knockout cases has reached 3. This report expands the mutational spectrum and the inheritance pattern of HCM.

Highlights

  • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a heart disorder caused by autosomal dominant alterations affecting both sarcomeric genes and other nonsarcomeric loci in a minority of cases

  • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a cardiac disease characterized by left ventricular hypertrophy un‐ explained by secondary causes, and a nondilated left ventricle with preserved or increased ejection fraction

  • Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is considered a disease of the cardiac sarcomere mainly caused by pathogenic variants in over 10 loci, with MYBPC3, MYH7 and TNNT2 account‐ ing for approximately 50% of the HCM families and encoding cardiac myosin­‐binding protein C, β­‐myosin heavy chain, and cardiac troponin T, re‐ spectively.[2]

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Summary

Introduction

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a heart disorder caused by autosomal dominant alterations affecting both sarcomeric genes and other nonsarcomeric loci in a minority of cases.

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