Abstract

The underlying genetic mechanisms and early pathological events of children with primary cardiomyopathy (CMP) are insufficiently characterized. In this study, we aimed to characterize the mutational spectrum of primary CMP in a large cohort of patients ≤18 years referred to a tertiary center. Eighty unrelated index patients with pediatric primary CMP underwent genetic testing with a panel-based next-generation sequencing approach of 89 genes. At least one pathogenic or probably pathogenic variant was identified in 30/80 (38%) index patients. In all CMP subgroups, patients carried most frequently variants of interest in sarcomere genes suggesting them as a major contributor in pediatric primary CMP. In MYH7, MYBPC3, and TNNI3, we identified 18 pathogenic/probably pathogenic variants (MYH7 n = 7, MYBPC3 n = 6, TNNI3 n = 5, including one homozygous (TNNI3 c.24+2T>A) truncating variant. Protein and transcript level analysis on heart biopsies from individuals with homozygous mutation of TNNI3 revealed that the TNNI3 protein is absent and associated with upregulation of the fetal isoform TNNI1. The present study further supports the clinical importance of sarcomeric mutation-not only in adult-but also in pediatric primary CMP. TNNI3 is the third most important disease gene in this cohort and complete loss of TNNI3 leads to severe pediatric CMP.

Highlights

  • We present the distribution of genetic variants in certain functional groups and highlight genetic variants which can lead to severe CMP

  • We report the genetic basis of a cohort of 80 pediatric patients with pediatric primary CMP referred to a tertiary center

  • Variants of interest (VOI) were most frequently detected in the myosin heavy chain 7 (MYH7), MYBPC3, TNNI3, and DSP genes

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Summary

| MATERIAL AND METHODS

!Primary cardiomyopathies (CMPs) are genetically heterogeneous disorders with a large number of disease-causing genes. Depending on the phenotypic composition of the cohorts, including secondary CMP, and different next-generation sequencing (NGS) strategies, recent studies lead to the identification of pathogenic variants in 26% to 39% of pediatric patients.[1,2] These genetic defects exhibit variable expressivity and variable penetrance. Variants of interest (VOI) were classified as pathogenic, probably pathogenic, or variant of uncertain significance (VUS) according to the guidelines of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics (ACMG)[14] using the recommended frequency threshold in CMPs of

| RESULTS
| DISCUSSION
Findings
DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
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