Predicting novel disease mutations in the cardiac sodium channel

Voltage-gated sodium channels Nav1.x mediate the rising phase of action potential in excitable cells. Variations in gene SCN5A, which encodes the hNav1.5 channel, are associated with arrhythmias and other heart diseases. About 1,400 SCN5A variants are listed in public databases, but for more than 30...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inBiochemical and biophysical research communications Vol. 521; no. 3; pp. 603 - 611
Main Authors Tarnovskaya, Svetlana I., Korkosh, Vyacheslav S., Zhorov, Boris S., Frishman, Dmitrij
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 15.01.2020
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Summary:Voltage-gated sodium channels Nav1.x mediate the rising phase of action potential in excitable cells. Variations in gene SCN5A, which encodes the hNav1.5 channel, are associated with arrhythmias and other heart diseases. About 1,400 SCN5A variants are listed in public databases, but for more than 30% of these the clinical significance is unknown and can currently only be derived by bioinformatics approaches. We used the ClinVar, SwissVar, Humsavar, gnomAD, and Ensembl databases to assemble a dataset of 1392 hNav1.5 variants (370 pathogenic variants, 602 benign variants and 420 variants of uncertain significance) as well as a dataset of 1766 damaging variants in 20 human sodium and calcium channel paralogs. Twelve in silico tools were tested for their ability to predict damaging mutations in hNav1.5. The best performing tool, MutPred, correctly predicted 93% of damaging variants in our hNav1.5 dataset. Among the 86 hNav1.5 variants for which electrophysiological data are also available, MutPred correctly predicted 82% of damaging variants. In the subset of 420 uncharacterized hNav1.5 variants MutPred predicted 196 new pathogenic variants. Among these, 74 variants are also annotated as damaging in at least one hNav1.5 paralog. Using a combination of sequence-based bioinformatics techniques and paralogous annotation we have substantially expanded the knowledge on disease variants in the cardiac sodium channel and assigned a pathogenic status to a number of mutations that so far have been described as variants of uncertain significance. A list of reclassified hNav1.5 variants and their properties is provided. •Clinical significance of over 30% variants of cardiac sodium channel hNav1.5 is uncertain.•Among 12 in-silico tools MutPred performed best in predicting hNav1.5 disease variants.•MutPred and paralogues annotations consensually predict disease status to 74 variants of uncertain significance.•Tables with reclassified variants and their properties are provided.
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ISSN:0006-291X
1090-2104
DOI:10.1016/j.bbrc.2019.10.142