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Early somatic mosaicism is a rare cause of long-QT syndrome

Authors :
Thomas O'Hara
James R. Priest
Jason B. Harris
Marco V Perez
Luiz Belardinelli
Kristopher M. Kahlig
Thomas Quertermous
John A. West
Scott R. Ceresnak
Joseph K. Yu
Patrick M. Boyle
Daniela Macaya
Sean Michael Boyle
Euan A. Ashley
Megan E. Grove
Michael J. Clark
Charles Gawad
Sarah Garcia
Sridharan Rajamani
Stephen R. Quake
Natalia A. Trayanova
Katsuhide Maeda
Richard Chen
Lindsey Malloy-Walton
Christian Antolik
Kyla Dunn
Norma F. Neff
Anne M. Dubin
Frederick E. Dewey
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 113:11555-11560
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2016.

Abstract

Somatic mosaicism, the occurrence and propagation of genetic variation in cell lineages after fertilization, is increasingly recognized to play a causal role in a variety of human diseases. We investigated the case of life-threatening arrhythmia in a 10-day-old infant with long QT syndrome (LQTS). Rapid genome sequencing suggested a variant in the sodium channel NaV1.5 encoded by SCN5A, NM_000335:c.5284G > T predicting p.(V1762L), but read depth was insufficient to be diagnostic. Exome sequencing of the trio confirmed read ratios inconsistent with Mendelian inheritance only in the proband. Genotyping of single circulating leukocytes demonstrated the mutation in the genomes of 8% of patient cells, and RNA sequencing of cardiac tissue from the infant confirmed the expression of the mutant allele at mosaic ratios. Heterologous expression of the mutant channel revealed significantly delayed sodium current with a dominant negative effect. To investigate the mechanism by which mosaicism might cause arrhythmia, we built a finite element simulation model incorporating Purkinje fiber activation. This model confirmed the pathogenic consequences of cardiac cellular mosaicism and, under the presenting conditions of this case, recapitulated 2:1 AV block and arrhythmia. To investigate the extent to which mosaicism might explain undiagnosed arrhythmia, we studied 7,500 affected probands undergoing commercial gene-panel testing. Four individuals with pathogenic variants arising from early somatic mutation events were found. Here we establish cardiac mosaicism as a causal mechanism for LQTS and present methods by which the general phenomenon, likely to be relevant for all genetic diseases, can be detected through single-cell analysis and next-generation sequencing.

Details

ISSN :
10916490 and 00278424
Volume :
113
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1fac8c0bf23ed3c6bc4c65035aa2ab71