October 9, 2017

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Researchers uncover new congenital heart disease genes

This stylistic diagram shows a gene in relation to the double helix structure of DNA and to a chromosome (right). The chromosome is X-shaped because it is dividing. Introns are regions often found in eukaryote genes that are removed in the splicing process (after the DNA is transcribed into RNA): Only the exons encode the protein. The diagram labels a region of only 55 or so bases as a gene. In reality, most genes are hundreds of times longer. Credit: Thomas Splettstoesser/Wikipedia/CC BY-SA 4.0
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This stylistic diagram shows a gene in relation to the double helix structure of DNA and to a chromosome (right). The chromosome is X-shaped because it is dividing. Introns are regions often found in eukaryote genes that are removed in the splicing process (after the DNA is transcribed into RNA): Only the exons encode the protein. The diagram labels a region of only 55 or so bases as a gene. In reality, most genes are hundreds of times longer. Credit: Thomas Splettstoesser/Wikipedia/CC BY-SA 4.0

Approximately one in every 100 babies is born with congenital heart disease (CHD), and CHD remains the leading cause of mortality from birth defects. Although advancements in surgery and care have improved rates of survival for these infants, CHD patients remain at elevated risk for heart complications later in life, other congenital abnormalities and neurodevelopmental deficits. With relatively little known about the genes underlying many cases of CHD, pressing questions from parents about their children's future health and about risk of CHD for future offspring remain difficult for physicians to answer. But a new study from the NHLBI Pediatric Cardiac Genomics Consortium (PGCG), part of the Bench to Bassinet Program, has helped shed new light on some of the underlying genetic causes of cases of CHD as well as the long-term outlook for patients who carry these mutations.

The team, led by researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital, publishes its latest findings in Nature Genetics this week.

"As a clinician, there's nothing more devastating than when parents ask us about future risk for a child with CHD or for having another child, and we have to tell them, 'We don't know,'" said co-corresponding author Christine Seidman, MD, director of the BWH Cardiovascular Genetics Center and Howard Hughes Medical Institute investigator. "The discoveries revealed through this work not only teach us about the fundamental biology through which the heart gets built, but also have important : Detecting these mutations could help us alert patients and parents to risk of ongoing problems that can be addressed and managed, and define risk for a second child."

The new study, conducted in collaboration with researchers at seven academic centers across the U.S., leverages clinical and genetic data from more than 2,800 patients with CHD as well as information from parents. This allowed the researchers to determine which had been passed from parents to offspring and which had appeared spontaneously in the child's genome (known as de novo mutations). The team reports several important findings:

1. Some genetic mutations are transmitted from parents to children:

2. Some mutations appear for the first time in a child's genome:

These new findings could be used to expand current genetic testing panels for CHD, to improve both information for about the recurrence risks in future children, and the long-term care of the CHD infants. Seidman notes that while this research is still ongoing, these findings already indicate that as many as 400 contribute to CHD. Given that, sequencing a baby's whole genome may be a better approach than screening for specific .

"Whole-genome sequencing may be the most effective way to detect genetic variants that cause and may effect a child's short- and long-term care," said Seidman.

More information: Contribution of rare inherited and de novo variants in 2,871 congenital heart disease probands, Nature Genetics (2017). nature.com/articles/doi:10.1038/ng.3970

Journal information: Nature Genetics

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