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Genetic Mosaicism in Calmodulinopathy

Authors :
Wren, L
Jiménez-Jáimez, J
Al-Ghamdi, S
Al-Aama, J
Bdeir, A
Al-Hassnan, Z
Kuan, J
Foo, R
Potet, F
Johnson, C
Aziz, M
Carvill, G
Kaski, J
Crotti, L
Perin, F
Monserrat, L
Burridge, P
Schwartz, P
Chazin, W
Bhuiyan, Z
George AL, J
Wren LM
Jiménez-Jáimez J
Al-Ghamdi S
Al-Aama JY
Bdeir A
Al-Hassnan ZN
Kuan JL
Foo RY
Potet F
Johnson CN
Aziz MC
Carvill GL
Kaski JP
Crotti L
Perin F
Monserrat L
Burridge PW
Schwartz PJ
Chazin WJ
Bhuiyan ZA
George AL Jr.
Wren, L
Jiménez-Jáimez, J
Al-Ghamdi, S
Al-Aama, J
Bdeir, A
Al-Hassnan, Z
Kuan, J
Foo, R
Potet, F
Johnson, C
Aziz, M
Carvill, G
Kaski, J
Crotti, L
Perin, F
Monserrat, L
Burridge, P
Schwartz, P
Chazin, W
Bhuiyan, Z
George AL, J
Wren LM
Jiménez-Jáimez J
Al-Ghamdi S
Al-Aama JY
Bdeir A
Al-Hassnan ZN
Kuan JL
Foo RY
Potet F
Johnson CN
Aziz MC
Carvill GL
Kaski JP
Crotti L
Perin F
Monserrat L
Burridge PW
Schwartz PJ
Chazin WJ
Bhuiyan ZA
George AL Jr.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Background: CaM (calmodulin) mutations are associated with congenital arrhythmia susceptibility (calmodulinopathy) and are most often de novo. In this report, we sought to broaden the genotype-phenotype spectrum of calmodulinopathies with 2 novel calmodulin mutations and to investigate mosaicism in 2 affected families. Methods: CaM mutations were identified in 4 independent cases by DNA sequencing. Biochemical and electrophysiological studies were performed to determine functional consequences of each mutation. Results: Genetic studies identified 2 novel CaM variants (CALM3-E141K in 2 cases; CALM1-E141V) and one previously reported CaM pathogenic variant (CALM3-D130G) among 4 probands with shared clinical features of prolonged QTc interval (range 505-725 ms) and documented ventricular arrhythmia. A fatal outcome occurred for 2 of the cases. The parents of all probands were asymptomatic with normal QTc duration. However, 2 of the families had multiple affected offspring or multiple occurrences of intrauterine fetal demise. The mother from the family with recurrent intrauterine fetal demise exhibited the CALM3-E141K mutant allele in 25% of next-generation sequencing reads indicating somatic mosaicism, whereas CALM3-D130G was present in 6% of captured molecules of the paternal DNA sample, also indicating mosaicism. Two novel mutations (E141K and E141V) impaired Ca2+ binding affinity to the C-domain of CaM. Human-induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes overexpressing mutant or wild-type CaM showed that both mutants impaired Ca2+-dependent inactivation of L-type Ca2+ channels and prolonged action potential duration. Conclusions: We report 2 families with somatic mosaicism associated with arrhythmogenic calmodulinopathy, and demonstrate dysregulation of L-type Ca2+ channels by 2 novel CaM mutations affecting the same residue. Parental mosaicism should be suspected in families with unexplained fetal arrhythmia or fetal demise combined with a documented CaM mut

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
STAMPA, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1308932757
Document Type :
Electronic Resource