Pathological and Comprehensive Genetic Investigation of Autopsy Cases of Idiopathic Bradyarrhythmia.


Journal

Circulation journal : official journal of the Japanese Circulation Society
ISSN: 1347-4820
Titre abrégé: Circ J
Pays: Japan
ID NLM: 101137683

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
23 12 2022
Historique:
pubmed: 8 9 2022
medline: 28 12 2022
entrez: 7 9 2022
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Idiopathic bradyarrhythmia is considered to be due to pathological degeneration of the cardiac conduction system (CCS) during aging. There appears to have been no comprehensive genetic investigations in patients with idiopathic bradyarrhythmia.Methods and Results: Ten autopsy cases with advanced bradyarrhythmia (6 men and 4 women; age: 70-94 years, 81.5±6.9 years; 5 cases each of sinus node dysfunction [SND] and complete atrioventricular block [CAVB]) were genetically investigated by using whole-exome sequencing. Morphometric analysis of the CCS was performed with sex-, age- and comorbidity-matched control cases. As a result, severe loss of nodal cells and distal atrioventricular conduction system were found in SND and CAVB, respectively. However, the conduction tissue loss was not significant in either the atrioventricular node or the proximal bundle of His in CAVB cases. A total of 13 heterozygous potential variants were found in 3 CAVB and 2 SND cases. Of these 13 variants, 4 were missense in the known progressive cardiac conduction disease-related genes: GATA4 and RYR2. In the remaining 9 variants, 5 were loss-of-function mutation with highly possible pathogenicity. In addition to degenerative changes of selectively vulnerable areas in the heart during advancing age, the vulnerability of the CCS, which may be associated with "rare variants of small effect," may also be a contributing factor to the degeneration of CCS, leading to "idiopathic" bradyarrhythmia.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND
Idiopathic bradyarrhythmia is considered to be due to pathological degeneration of the cardiac conduction system (CCS) during aging. There appears to have been no comprehensive genetic investigations in patients with idiopathic bradyarrhythmia.Methods and Results: Ten autopsy cases with advanced bradyarrhythmia (6 men and 4 women; age: 70-94 years, 81.5±6.9 years; 5 cases each of sinus node dysfunction [SND] and complete atrioventricular block [CAVB]) were genetically investigated by using whole-exome sequencing. Morphometric analysis of the CCS was performed with sex-, age- and comorbidity-matched control cases. As a result, severe loss of nodal cells and distal atrioventricular conduction system were found in SND and CAVB, respectively. However, the conduction tissue loss was not significant in either the atrioventricular node or the proximal bundle of His in CAVB cases. A total of 13 heterozygous potential variants were found in 3 CAVB and 2 SND cases. Of these 13 variants, 4 were missense in the known progressive cardiac conduction disease-related genes: GATA4 and RYR2. In the remaining 9 variants, 5 were loss-of-function mutation with highly possible pathogenicity.
CONCLUSIONS
In addition to degenerative changes of selectively vulnerable areas in the heart during advancing age, the vulnerability of the CCS, which may be associated with "rare variants of small effect," may also be a contributing factor to the degeneration of CCS, leading to "idiopathic" bradyarrhythmia.

Identifiants

pubmed: 36070930
doi: 10.1253/circj.CJ-22-0397
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

111-119

Commentaires et corrections

Type : CommentIn

Auteurs

Yukiko Hata (Y)

Department of Legal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toyama.

Shojiro Ichimata (S)

Department of Legal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toyama.

Keiichi Hirono (K)

Department of Pediatrics, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toyama.

Yoshiaki Yamaguchi (Y)

Department of Legal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toyama.
Department of Cardiology, Saiseikai Takaoka Hospital.

Yuko Oku (Y)

Department of Legal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toyama.

Fukiko Ichida (F)

Department of Pediatrics, International University of Health & Welfare.

Naoki Nishida (N)

Department of Legal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toyama.

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