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Circulation Research. 2007
Published online before print March 8, 2007, doi: 10.1161/01.RES.0000263008.66799.aa
A more recent version of this article appeared on March 30, 2007
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Submitted on December 30, 2006
Revised on February 26, 2007
Accepted on February 28, 2007

Myozenin 2 Is a Novel Gene for Human Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy

Adriana Osio ; Lily Tan ; Suet N. Chen ; Raffaella Lombardi ; Sherif F. Nagueh ; Sanjay Shete ; Robert Roberts ; James T. Willerson ; and Ali J. Marian *

From the Center for Cardiovascular Genetic Research (A.O., L.T., S.N.C., R.L., J.T.W., A.J.M.), The Brown Foundation Institute of Molecular Medicine, University of Texas Health Sciences Center and Texas Heart Institute, Houston; The Methodist DeBakey Heart Center (S.F.N.), Houston, Tex; The MD Anderson Cancer Center (S.S.), Houston, Tex; and University of Ottawa Heart Institute (R.R.), Ottawa, Canada.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: Ali.J.Marian{at}uth.tmc.edu.

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a genetic disorder caused by mutations in sarcomeric proteins (excluding phenocopy). The causal genes in approximately one-third of the cases remain unknown. We identified a family comprised of 6 clinically affected members. The phenotype was characterized by early onset of symptoms, pronounced cardiac hypertrophy, and cardiac arrhythmias. We excluded MYH7, MYBPC3, TNNT2, and ACTC1 as the causal gene either by direct sequencing or by haplotype analysis. To map the putative candidate sarcomeric gene, we perforbold locus-specific haplotyping to detect cosegregation of the locus haplotype with the phenotype, followed by mutation screening. We genotyped 5 short-tandem-repeat markers that spanned a 4.4-centimorgan region on 4q26-q27 locus and encompassed myozenin 2 (MYOZ2), a Z-disk protein. The maximum logarithm of odds score was 2.03 (P=0.005). All affected members shared a common haplotype, implicating MYOZ2 as the causal gene. To detect the causal mutation, we sequenced all exons and exon-intron boundaries of MYOZ2 in 10 family members and identified a T->C missense mutation corresponding to S48P substitution, which cosegregated with inheritance of HCM (N=6). It was absent in 4 clinically normal family members and in 658 additional normal individuals. To determine frequency of the MYOZ2 mutations in HCM, we sequenced MYOZ2 in 516 HCM probands and detected another missense mutation (I246M). It was absent in 2 normal family members and 517 controls. Both mutations affect highly conserved amino acids. We conclude MYOZ2 is a novel causal gene for human HCM.




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