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RBM20, a gene for hereditary cardiomyopathy, regulates titin splicing

Authors

  • W. Guo
  • S. Schafer
  • M.L. Greaser
  • M.H. Radke
  • M. Liss
  • T. Govindarajan
  • H. Maatz
  • H. Schulz
  • S.E. Lincoln
  • A.M. Parrish
  • V. Dauksaite
  • P. Vakeel
  • S. Klaassen
  • B. Gerull
  • L. Thierfelder
  • V. Regitz-Zagrosek
  • T.A. Hacker
  • K.W. Saupe
  • G.W. Dec
  • P.T. Ellinor
  • C.A. MacRae
  • B. Spallek
  • R. Fischer
  • A. Perrot
  • C. Ozcelik
  • K. Saar
  • N. Hubner
  • M. Gotthardt

Journal

  • Nature Medicine

Citation

  • Nat Med 18 (5): 766-773

Abstract

  • Alternative splicing has a major role in cardiac adaptive responses, as exemplified by the isoform switch of the sarcomeric protein titin, which adjusts ventricular filling. By positional cloning using a previously characterized rat strain with altered titin mRNA splicing, we identified a loss-of-function mutation in the gene encoding RNA binding motif protein 20 (Rbm20) as the underlying cause of pathological titin isoform expression. The phenotype of Rbm20-deficient rats resembled the pathology seen in individuals with dilated cardiomyopathy caused by RBM20 mutations. Deep sequencing of the human and rat cardiac transcriptome revealed an RBM20-dependent regulation of alternative splicing. In addition to titin (TTN), we identified a set of 30 genes with conserved splicing regulation between humans and rats. This network is enriched for genes that have previously been linked to cardiomyopathy, ion homeostasis and sarcomere biology. Our studies emphasize the key role of post-transcriptional regulation in cardiac function and provide mechanistic insights into the pathogenesis of human heart failure.


DOI

doi:10.1038/nm.2693