Author/Authors :
Eshaghkhani, Yeganeh Department of Medical Genetics - Faculty of Medicine - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Mohamadifar, Arezoo Rajaie Cardiovascular - Medical and Research Center - Iran University of Medical Science, Tehran, Iran , Asadollahi, Mostafa Department of Medical Genetics - Faculty of Medicine - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Taghizadeh, Mahdieh Watson Genetic Laboratory - North Kargar Street, Tehran, Iran , Karamzade, Arezou Department of Medical Genetics - Faculty of Medicine - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Saberi, Mohammad Department of Medical Genetics - Faculty of Medicine - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Nourmohammadi, Parisa Watson Genetic Laboratory - North Kargar Street, Tehran, Iran , Golchehre, Zahra Department of Medical Genetics - Faculty of Medicine - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran , Amin, Ahmad Rajaie Cardiovascular - Medical and Research Center - Iran University of Medical Science, Tehran, Iran , Keramatipour, Mohammad Watson Genetic Laboratory - North Kargar Street, Tehran, Iran - Department of Medical Genetics - Faculty of Medicine - Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran
Abstract :
Background: Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a progressive heart condition characterized by left
ventricular chamber enlargement associated with systolic heart failure and prolonged action potential
duration. Genetic variations in genes that encode cytoskeleton, sarcomere, and nuclear envelope
proteins are responsible for 45% of cases. In our study, we focused on a pedigree with familial DCM
to decipher the potential genetic cause(s) in affected members developing arrhythmia, end-stage heart
failure, and sudden death.
Methods: Whole-exome sequencing (WES) was exploited for a 27-year-old heart-transplanted female
as the proband, and the derived data were filtered using the standard pipelines.
Results: A 57-nucleotide deletion (c.405_422+39del) in the desmoplakin gene (DSP)
(NM_004415.4) was identified as a novel pathogenic variant. Familial segregation analysis indicated
that this variant is present in clinically affected members and absent in unaffected members.
Conclusions: It seems that the detected variant induces intron retention, resulting in a premature stop
codon in intron 3 of DSP leading to production of a truncated, nonfunctional protein. Additionally, it
can trigger a nonsense-mediated mRNA decay pathway associated with inhibition of protein
production. The present study results illustrated that a novel deletion in DSP can cause DCM in an
Iranian family.
Keywords :
Desmoplakin , Dilated cardiomyopathy , Pathogenic variant , Whole-exome sequencing