Abstract

Myosin motors are the fundamental force-generating elements of muscle contraction. Variation in the human β-cardiac myosin heavy chain gene (MYH7) can lead to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), a heritable disease characterized by cardiac hypertrophy, heart failure, and sudden cardiac death. How specific myosin variants alter motor function or clinical expression of disease remains incompletely understood. Here, we combine structural models of myosin from multiple stages of its chemomechanical cycle, exome sequencing data from two population cohorts of 60,706 and 42,930 individuals, and genetic and phenotypic data from 2,913 patients with HCM to identify regions of disease enrichment within β-cardiac myosin. We first developed computational models of the human β-cardiac myosin protein before and after the myosin power stroke. Then, using a spatial scan statistic modified to analyze genetic variation in protein 3D space, we found significant enrichment of disease-associated variants in the converter, a kinetic domain that transduces force from the catalytic domain to the lever arm to accomplish the power stroke. Focusing our analysis on surface-exposed residues, we identified a larger region significantly enriched for disease-associated variants that contains both the converter domain and residues on a single flat surface on the myosin head described as the myosin mesa. Notably, patients with HCM with variants in the enriched regions have earlier disease onset than patients who have HCM with variants elsewhere. Our study provides a model for integrating protein structure, large-scale genetic sequencing, and detailed phenotypic data to reveal insight into time-shifted protein structures and genetic disease.

Highlights

  • Myosin motors are the fundamental force-generating elements of muscle contraction

  • We first compared the linear distribution of missense variants in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) (SHaRe) with missense variants in a population reference cohort (ExAC)

  • The Exome Aggregation Consortium (ExAC) cohort contains sequencing information from 60,706 individuals who were part of disease-specific and population genetic studies, and the Sarcomeric Human Cardiomyopathy Registry (SHaRe) database contains 2,913 individuals with HCM sequenced for MYH7

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Summary

Introduction

Myosin motors are the fundamental force-generating elements of muscle contraction. Variation in the human β-cardiac myosin heavy chain gene (MYH7) can lead to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), a heritable disease characterized by cardiac hypertrophy, heart failure, and sudden cardiac death. These discrepancies point to the need to test for regional HCM variant enrichment within MYH7 using both a large patient population and a large reference cohort while accounting for the 3D structure of β-cardiac myosin.

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