International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Nov 2023)

Lack of Evidence for the Role of the p.(Ser96Ala) Polymorphism in Histidine-Rich Calcium Binding Protein as a Secondary Hit in Cardiomyopathies

  • Stephanie M. van der Voorn,
  • Esmée van Drie,
  • Virginnio Proost,
  • Kristina Dimitrova,
  • Netherlands ACM/PLN Registry,
  • Robert F. Ernst,
  • Cynthia A. James,
  • Crystal Tichnell,
  • Brittney Murray,
  • Hugh Calkins,
  • Ardan M. Saguner,
  • Firat Duru,
  • Patrick T. Ellinor,
  • Connie R. Bezzina,
  • Sean J. Jurgens,
  • J. Peter van Tintelen,
  • Toon A. B. van Veen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms242115931
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 21
p. 15931

Abstract

Read online

Inherited forms of arrhythmogenic and dilated cardiomyopathy (ACM and DCM) are characterized by variable disease expression and age-related penetrance. Calcium (Ca2+) is crucially important for proper cardiac function, and dysregulation of Ca2+ homeostasis seems to underly cardiomyopathy etiology. A polymorphism, c.286T>G p.(Ser96Ala), in the gene encoding the histidine-rich Ca2+ binding (HRC) protein, relevant for sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ cycling, has previously been associated with a marked increased risk of life-threatening arrhythmias among idiopathic DCM patients. Following this finding, we investigated whether p.(Ser96Ala) affects major cardiac disease manifestations in carriers of the phospholamban (PLN) c.40_42delAGA; p.(Arg14del) pathogenic variant (cohort 1); patients diagnosed with, or predisposed to, ACM (cohort 2); and DCM patients (cohort 3). We found that the allele frequency of the p.(Ser96Ala) polymorphism was similar across the general European–American population (control cohort, 40.3–42.2%) and the different cardiomyopathy cohorts (cohorts 1–3, 40.9–43.9%). Furthermore, the p.(Ser96Ala) polymorphism was not associated with life-threatening arrhythmias or heart failure-related events across various patient cohorts. We therefore conclude that there is a lack of evidence supporting the important role of the HRC p.(Ser96Ala) polymorphism as a modifier in cardiomyopathy, refuting previous findings. Further research is required to identify bona fide genomic predictors for the stratification of cardiomyopathy patients and their risk for life-threatening outcomes.

Keywords