Variant "KCNH2:c.2690A>C(p.Lys897Thr)"
Search results: 7 records
Variant information
Gene:
Variant:
KCNH2:c.2690A>C(p.Lys897Thr) 
Genomic location:
chr7:150645534(hg19) 
HGVS:
SO Term RefSeq
protein_coding NM_000238.3:c.2690A>C(p.Lys897Thr)
protein_coding NM_172057.2:c.1670A>C(p.Lys557Thr)
protein_coding NM_001204798.1:c.*1453A>C
protein_coding NM_172056.2:c.*1453A>C
Alias:
KCNH2:p.Lys897Thr, KCNH2:p.K897T, KCNH2:K897T 
dbSNP ID:
GWAS trait:
Modifier statisitcs
Record:
Disorder:
Reference:
Effect type:
Expressivity(6) ,Penetrance(1)  
Modifier effect:
Risk factor(4) ,Altered current amplitude(1) ,Altered incidence(1) ,Altered severity(1)  
Details:
  • Target disease:
    Effect type:
    Expressivity 
    Modifier effect:
    Risk factor 
    Evidence:
    Gene activity study 
    Effect:
    KCNH2 polymorphism may modify the clinical expression of a latent LQT2 mutation and may contribute to the risk for sudden death in more prevalent cardiac diseases.
    Alias in reference:
    KCNH2:K897T
    Reference:
    Title:
    KCNH2-K897T is a genetic modifier of latent congenital long-QT syndrome.
    Species studied:
    Human
    Abstract:
    Clinical heterogeneity among patients with long-QT syndrome (LQTS) sharing the same disease-causing mutation is usually attributed to variable penetrance. One potential explanation for this phenomenon is the coexistence of modifier gene alleles, possibly common single nucleotide polymorphisms, altering arrhythmia susceptibility. We demonstrate this concept in a family segregating a novel, low-penetrant KCNH2 mutation along with a common single nucleotide polymorphism in the same gene.
  • Target disease:
    Arrhythmia (HP:0011675)
    Effect type:
    Expressivity 
    Modifier effect:
    Risk factor 
    Evidence:
    From review article 
    Effect:
    This genetic variance may contribute as a second genetic modifier for arrhythmia development is under current investigation.
    Alias in reference:
    KCNH2:K897T
    Reference:
    Title:
    Susceptibility genes and modifiers for cardiac arrhythmias.
    Species studied:
    Human
    Abstract:
    The last decade has seen a dramatic increase in the understanding of the molecular basis of arrhythmias. Much of this new information has been driven by genetic studies that focused on rare, monogenic arrhythmia syndromes that were accompanied or followed by cellular electrophysiological or biochemical studies. The marked clinical heterogeneity known from these familial arrhythmia syndromes has led to the development of a multifactorial (multi-hit) concept of arrhythmogenesis in which causal gene mutations have a major effect on disease expression that is further modified by other factors such as age, gender, sympathetic tone, and environmental triggers. Systematic genetic studies have unraveled an unexpected DNA sequence variance in these arrhythmia genes that has ethnic-specific patterns. Whether this genetic variance may contribute as a second genetic modifier for arrhythmia development is under current investigation. The aim of this article is to review common genetic variation in ion channel genes and to compare these recent findings.
  • Target disease:
    Arrhythmia (HP:0011675)
    Effect type:
    Expressivity 
    Modifier effect:
    Altered current amplitude 
    Evidence:
    From review article 
    Effect:
    Coexpression of KCNH2-A1116V and KCNH2-K897T channels together resulted in significantly reduced current amplitude
    Alias in reference:
    KCNH2:p.K897T
    Reference:
    Title:
    The primary arrhythmia syndromes: same mutation, different manifestations. Are we starting to understand why
    Species studied:
    Human
    Abstract:
    The discovery of pathogenic mutations primarily in genes encoding cardiac ion-channel proteins underlying the primary cardiac arrhythmia syndromes has had a remarkable impact on the management of these disorders, especially in patients with the long-QT syndrome. The availability of a genetic diagnostic test has added an important diagnostic tool, providing new opportunities for patient management such as early (presymptomatic) identification and treatment of patients at risk of developing fatal arrhythmias, risk stratification, and installation of gene-specific therapy. However, the fact that the identification of the causal mutation within a family allows diagnosis in other family members independently from the ECG features and arrhythmic manifestations quickly led to the recognition that extensive variability in clinical manifestations (e.g., extent of ECG abnormality and/or symptomatology) may be observed among family members carrying an identical mutation in a single ion channel gene. It is commonly held that this clinical variability stems from interactions between environmental and genetic modifiers with the particular pathogenic mutation. This Molecular Perspectives article reviews current knowledge on these modifiers of disease expression in the cardiac arrhythmia syndromes with particular reference to genetic modifiers.
  • Target disease:
    Long QT Syndrome (DOID_2843)
    Effect type:
    Expressivity 
    Modifier effect:
    Risk factor 
    Evidence:
    From review article 
    Effect:
    Increase risk of cardiac events
    Alias in reference:
    KCNH2:c.2690A>C(p.Lys897Thr)
    Reference:
    Title:
    Modifier genes for sudden cardiac death.
    Species studied:
    Human
    Abstract:
    Genetic conditions, even those associated with identical gene mutations, can present with variable clinical manifestations. One widely accepted explanation for this phenomenon is the existence of genetic factors capable of modifying the consequences of disease-causing mutations (modifier genes). Here, we address the concepts and principles by which genetic factors may be involved in modifying risk for cardiac arrhythmia, then discuss the current knowledge and interpretation of their contribution to clinical heterogeneity. We illustrate these concepts in the context of two important clinical conditions associated with risk for sudden cardiac death including a monogenic disorder (congenital long QT syndrome) in which the impact of modifier genes has been established, and a complex trait (life-threatening arrhythmias in acute myocardial infarction) for which the search for genetic modifiers of arrhythmic risk is more challenging. Advances in understanding the contribution of modifier genes to a higher or lower propensity towards sudden death should improve patient-specific risk stratification and be a major step towards precision medicine.
  • Target disease:
    Long QT Syndrome (DOID_2843)
    Effect type:
    Expressivity 
    Modifier effect:
    Altered severity 
    Evidence:
    Pedigree analysis and gene activity study 
    Effect:
    KCNQ1-p.R583H, KCNH2-p.K897T, and KCNE1-p.G38S could be LQTS modifiers.
    Alias in reference:
    KCNH2:c.2690A>C(p.Lys897Thr)
    Reference:
    Title:
    Allelic Complexity in Long QT Syndrome: A Family-Case Study.
    Species studied:
    Human
    Abstract:
    Congenital long QT syndrome (LQTS) is associated with high genetic and allelic heterogeneity. In some cases, more than one genetic variant is identified in the same (compound heterozygosity) or different (digenic heterozygosity) genes, and subjects with multiple pathogenic mutations may have a more severe disease. Standard-of-care clinical genetic testing for this and other arrhythmia susceptibility syndromes improves the identification of complex genotypes. Therefore, it is important to distinguish between pathogenic mutations and benign rare variants. We identified four genetic variants (KCNQ1-p.R583H, KCNH2-p.C108Y, KCNH2-p.K897T, and KCNE1-p.G38S) in an LQTS family. On the basis of in silico analysis, clinical data from our family, and the evidence from previous studies, we analyzed two mutated channels, KCNQ1-p.R583H and KCNH2-p.C108Y, using the whole-cell patch clamp technique. We found that KCNQ1-p.R583H was not associated with a severe functional impairment, whereas KCNH2-p.C108Y, a novel variant, encoded a non-functional channel that exerts dominant-negative effects on the wild-type. Notably, the common variants KCNH2-p.K897T and KCNE1-p.G38S were previously reported to produce more severe phenotypes when combined with disease-causing alleles. Our results indicate that the novel KCNH2-C108Y variant can be a pathogenic LQTS mutation, whereas KCNQ1-p.R583H, KCNH2-p.K897T, and KCNE1-p.G38S could be LQTS modifiers.
  • Target disease:
    Long QT Syndrome (DOID_2843)
    Effect type:
    Penetrance 
    Modifier effect:
    Altered incidence 
    Evidence:
    From review article 
    Effect:
    Protective effect
    Alias in reference:
    KCNH2:p.Lys897Thr
    Reference:
    Title:
    Identification of a KCNQ1 polymorphism acting as a protective modifier against arrhythmic risk in long-QT syndrome.
    Species studied:
    Human
    Abstract:
    Long-QT syndrome (LQTS) is characterized by such striking clinical heterogeneity that, even among family members carrying the same mutation, clinical outcome can range between sudden death and no symptoms. We investigated the role of genetic variants as modifiers of risk for cardiac events in patients with LQTS.
  • Target disease:
    Effect type:
    Expressivity 
    Modifier effect:
    Risk factor 
    Evidence:
    Patients with an acute MI carrying the KCNH2-K897T polymorphism had an 8-fold greater risk of experiencing TdP compared with controls (95% confidence interval = 2-40) 
    Effect:
    The common K897T polymorphism is associated with an increased risk of TdP developing in the subacute phase of MI
    Alias in reference:
    KCNH2:K897T
    Reference:
    Title:
    Torsades de pointes following acute myocardial infarction: evidence for a deadly link with a common genetic variant.
    Species studied:
    Human
    Abstract:
    Although QT prolongation following myocardial infarction (MI) is generally moderate, cases with marked QT prolongation leading to life-threatening torsades de pointes (TdP) have been described.