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Using postmortem formalin fixed paraffin-embedded tissues for molecular testing of sudden cardiac death: A cautionary tale of utility and limitations

Lin, Ying; Gryazeva, Tatyana; Wang, Dawei; Zhou, Bo; Um, Sung Yon; Eng, Lucy S; Ruiter, Kevin; Rojas, Lisa; Williams, Nori; Sampson, Barbara A; Tang, Yingying
For archived cases of previously young healthy individuals where cause of sudden death remains undetermined, formalin fixed paraffin-embedded tissues (FFPE) samples are often the only biological resource available for molecular testing. We aim to ascertain the validity of postmortem molecular analysis of 95 cardiac genes using the FFPE samples routinely processed in the offices of medical examiners - typical fixation time in formalin ranges from days to months. The study was conducted in the College of American Pathologists accredited Molecular Genetics Laboratory within the City of New York Office of Chief Medical Examiner. Twelve cases, with FFPE samples and corresponding non-formalin fixed samples (RNAlater-preserved tissues or bloodstain card), were chosen for testing results comparison. The methods of extracting DNA from FFPE samples using Covaris, Qiagen, and Promega products showed comparable results. The quality of the extracted DNA, the target-enriched DNA libraries of 95 cardiac genes using HaloPlex Target Enrichment system by Agilent Technologies, and sequencing results using Illumina Miseq instrument were evaluated. Compared to the sequencing results of the nonfixed samples, the FFPE samples were categorized into three groups: 1) Group 1 samples fixed in formalin 2-6 days, had greater than 55 % sequencing regions ≥30x and 94%-100% variant concordance. 2) Group 2 samples fixed in formalin for 8 days, showed intra-sample sequencing variations: the surface tissues showed 25%-27% extra variants (false positive) and 8.1%-9.7% missing variants (false negative), whereas the repeated core tissues showed reduced extra variants to 1.6 % and the false negative error was unchanged. 3) Group 3 samples fixed in formalin 29-136 days, had 2-55 % sequencing regions ≥30x, up to 52.2 % missed variants and up to 6.3 % extra variants. All reportable variants (pathogenic, likely pathogenic or variant of uncertain significance) identified in the nonfixed samples were also identified in FFPE, albeit three variants had low confidence variant calling. In summary, our study showed that postmortem molecular diagnostic testing using FFPE samples routinely processed by the medical examiners should be cautioned, as they are replete with false positive and negative results, particularly when sample fixation time is longer than 8 days. Saving non-formalin fixed samples for high fidelity molecular analysis is strongly encouraged.
PMID: 32155531
ISSN: 1872-6283
CID: 4348962

Molecular autopsy: using the discovery of a novel de novo pathogenic variant in the KCNH2 gene to inform healthcare of surviving family

Dong, Jingyun; Williams, Nori; Cerrone, Marina; Borck, Christopher; Wang, Dawei; Zhou, Bo; Eng, Lucy S; Subbotina, Ekaterina; Um, Sung Yon; Lin, Ying; Ruiter, Kevin; Rojas, Lisa; Coetzee, William A; Sampson, Barbara A; Tang, Yingying
Background/UNASSIGNED:pathogenic variant in a decedent. Methods/UNASSIGNED:Forensic investigation and molecular autopsy were performed on an 18-year-old female who died suddenly and unexpectedly. Co-segregation family study of the first-degree relatives and functional characterization of the variant were conducted. Findings/UNASSIGNED:arose de novo, which eliminated the need for exhaustive genome testing and annual cardiac follow-up for the parents and four siblings. Interpretation/UNASSIGNED:Molecular testing enables accurate determination of natural causes of death and precision care of the surviving family members in a time and cost-saving manner. We advocate for molecular autopsy being included under the healthcare coverage in US.
PMCID:6288419
PMID: 30582040
ISSN: 2405-8440
CID: 3560052

Phenotypic variations in carriers of predicted protein-truncating genetic variants in MYBPC3: an autopsy-based case series

Williams, Nori; Marion, Robert; McDonald, Thomas V; Wang, Dawei; Zhou, Bo; Eng, Lucy S; Um, Sung Yon; Lin, Ying; Ruiter, Kevin; Rojas, Lisa; Sampson, Barbara A; Tang, Yingying
Our aim is to characterize predicted protein-truncating variants (PTVs) in MYBPC3, the gene most commonly associated with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), found in a series of autopsied HCM cases after sudden unexpected cardiac death. All cases underwent death scene investigation, gross and microscopic autopsies, toxicological testing, a review of medical records, and a molecular analysis of 95 cardiac genes. We found four pathogenic PTVs in MYBPC3 among male decedents. All variants were previously submitted to ClinVar without phenotype details. Two PTVs were located in the cardiac-specific myosin S2-binding (M) motif at the N-terminus of the MYBPC3-encoded cMyBP-C protein, and two PTVs were in the non-cardiac-specific C-terminus of the protein. The carriers of two cardiac-specific M-motif PTVs died at age 38 years; their heart weight (HW, g) and body mass index (BMI, kg/m2) ratio were 34.90 (890/25.5) and 23.56 (980/41.6), respectively. In contrast, the carriers of two non-cardiac-specific C-terminal PTVs died at age 57 and 67 years, respectively; their HW and BMI ratio were 14.71 (450/30.6) and 13.98 (600/42.9), respectively. A detailed three-generation family study was conducted in one case. This study showed age-at-death variations among MYBPC3 PTVs carriers in adult males.
PMID: 30282064
ISSN: 1879-1336
CID: 3328102

Applying High-Resolution Variant Classification to Cardiac Arrhythmogenic Gene Testing in a Demographically Diverse Cohort of Sudden Unexplained Deaths

Lin, Ying; Williams, Nori; Wang, Dawei; Coetzee, William; Zhou, Bo; Eng, Lucy S; Um, Sung Yon; Bao, Ruijun; Devinsky, Orrin; McDonald, Thomas V; Sampson, Barbara A; Tang, Yingying
BACKGROUND:Genetic variant interpretation contributes to testing yield differences reported for sudden unexplained death. Adapting a high-resolution variant interpretation framework, which considers disease prevalence, reduced penetrance, genetic heterogeneity, and allelic contribution to determine the maximum tolerated allele count in gnomAD, we report an evaluation of cardiac channelopathy and cardiomyopathy genes in a large, demographically diverse sudden unexplained death cohort that underwent thorough investigation in the United States' largest medical examiner's office. METHODS AND RESULTS/RESULTS:The cohort has 296 decedents: 147 Blacks, 64 Hispanics, 49 Whites, 22 Asians, and 14 mixed ethnicities; 142 infants (1 to 11 months), 39 children (1 to 17 years), 74 young adults (18 to 34 years), and 41 adults (35 to 55 years). Eighty-nine cardiac disease genes were evaluated. Using a high-resolution variant interpretation workflow, we classified 17 variants as pathogenic or likely pathogenic (2 of which were incidental findings and excluded in testing yield analysis), 46 novel variants of uncertain significance, and 130 variants of uncertain significance. Nine pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants in ClinVar were reclassified to likely benign and excluded in testing yield analysis. The yields of positive cases by ethnicity and age were 21.4% in mixed ethnicities, 10.2% Whites, 4.5% Asians, 3.1% Hispanics, and 2% Blacks; 7.7% children, 7.3% in adults, 5.4% young adults, and 2.8% infants. The percentages of uncertain cases with variants of uncertain significance by ethnicity were 45.5% in Asians, 45.3% Hispanics, 44.20% Blacks, 36.7% Whites, and 14.3% in mixed ethnicities. CONCLUSIONS:High-resolution variant interpretation provides diagnostic accuracy and healthcare efficiency. Under-represented populations warrant greater inclusion in future studies.
PMID: 29247119
ISSN: 1942-3268
CID: 2892682

Whole Exome Sequencing Reveals Severe Thrombophilia in Acute Unprovoked Idiopathic Fatal Pulmonary Embolism

Halvorsen, Matt; Lin, Ying; Sampson, Barbara A; Wang, Dawei; Zhou, Bo; Eng, Lucy S; Um, Sung Yon; Devinsky, Orrin; Goldstein, David B; Tang, Yingying
BACKGROUND: Acute unprovoked idiopathic fatal pulmonary embolism (IFPE) causes sudden death without an identifiable thrombogenic risk. We aimed to investigate the underlying genomic risks of IFPE through whole exome sequencing (WES). METHODS: We reviewed 14years of consecutive out-of-hospital fatal pulmonary embolism records (n=1478) from the ethnically diverse population of New York City. We selected 68 qualifying IFPE cases for WES. We compared the WES data of IFPE cases to those of 9332 controls to determine if there is an excess of rare damaging variants in the genome using ethnicity-matched controls in collapsing analyses. FINDINGS: We found nine of the 68 decedents (13.2%) who died of IFPE had at least one pathogenic or likely pathogenic variant in one of the three anti-coagulant genes: SERPINC1 (Antithrombin III), PROC, and PROS1. The odds ratio of developing IFPE as a variant carrier for SERPINC1 is 144.2 (95% CI, 26.3-779.4; P=1.7x10-7), for PROC is 85.6 (95% CI, 13.0-448.9; P=2.0x10-5), and for PROS1 is 56.4 (95% CI, 5.3-351.1; P=0.001). The average age-at-death of anti-coagulant gene variant carriers is significantly younger than that of non-carriers (28.56years versus 38.02years; P=0.01). INTERPRETATION: This study showed the important role of severe thrombophilia due to natural anti-coagulant deficiency in IFPE. Evaluating severe thrombophilia in out-of-hospital fatal PE beyond IFPE is warranted.
PMCID:5360570
PMID: 28174134
ISSN: 2352-3964
CID: 2437432

Cardiac channelopathy testing in 274 ethnically diverse sudden unexplained deaths

Wang, Dawei; Shah, Krunal R; Um, Sung Yon; Eng, Lucy S; Zhou, Bo; Lin, Ying; Mitchell, Adele A; Nicaj, Leze; Prinz, Mechthild; McDonald, Thomas V; Sampson, Barbara A; Tang, Yingying
Sudden unexplained deaths (SUD) in apparently healthy individuals, for which the causes of deaths remained undetermined after comprehensive forensic investigations and autopsy, present vexing challenges to medical examiners and coroners. Cardiac channelopathies, a group of inheritable diseases that primarily affect heart rhythm by altering the cardiac conduction system, have been known as one of the likely causes of SUD. Adhering to the recommendations of including molecular diagnostics of cardiac channelopathies in SUD investigation, the Molecular Genetics Laboratory of the New York City (NYC) Office of Chief Medical Examiner (OCME) has been routinely testing for six major channelopathy genes (KCNQ1, KCNH2, SCN5A, KCNE1, KCNE2, and RyR2) since 2008. Presented here are the results of cardiac channelopathy testing in 274 well-characterized autopsy negative SUD cases, all with thorough medicolegal death investigation including complete autopsy by NYC OCME between 2008 and 2012. The cohort consisted of 141 infants (92.9% younger than six-month old) and 133 non-infants (78.2% were between 19 and 58 years old). Among the ethnically diverse cohort, African American infants had the highest risks of SUD, and African American non-infants died at significantly younger age (23.7 years old, mean age-at-death) than those of other ethnicities (30.3 years old, mean age-at-death). A total of 22 previously classified cardiac channelopathy-associated variants and 24 novel putative channelopathy-associated variants were detected among the infants (13.5%) and non-infants (19.5%). Most channelopathy-associated variants involved the SCN5A gene (68.4% in infants, 50% in non-infants). We believe this is the first study assessing the role of cardiac channelopathy genes in a large and demographically diverse SUD population drawn from a single urban medical examiner's office in the United States. Our study supports that molecular testing for cardiac channelopathy is a valuable tool in SUD investigations and provides helpful information to medical examiners/coroners seeking cause of death in SUD as well as potentially life-saving information to surviving family members.
PMID: 24631775
ISSN: 0379-0738
CID: 951052

Ethnic differences in out-of-hospital fatal pulmonary embolism

Tang, Yingying; Sampson, Barbara; Pack, Stephanie; Shah, Krunal; Yon Um, Sung; Wang, Dawei; Wang, Tao; Prinz, Mechthild
BACKGROUND: In-hospital pulmonary embolism (PE) has been extensively studied in large populations; however, out-of-hospital fatal PE studies are rare. Here, we systematically evaluated a large number of decedents who suffered fatal PE outside of hospitals and were subsequently investigated by the New York City Office of Chief Medical Examiner. METHODS AND RESULTS: A total of 578 consecutive out-of-hospital fatal PE cases were analyzed. All underwent autopsy, toxicology, microbiology, and genetic testing. Incidence rates and baseline characteristics were analyzed. Race-adjusted incidence rates of out-of-hospital fatal PE (per 100 000 people per year) were as follows: blacks, 3.73 (95% confidence interval, 3.31 to 4.11); whites, 1.15 (95% confidence interval, 0.96 to 1.33); and Hispanics, 0.93 (95% confidence interval, 0.72 to 1.10). Overall, obesity (body mass index >/=30 kg/m(2)) was 2.5- to 3-fold higher in fatal PE cases than in the New York City population as a whole. Carrier frequencies for prothrombin G20210A in fatal PE were 2- to 10-fold higher than reported frequencies in ethnically matched controls. Cumulative distribution curves showed that compared with whites, blacks and Hispanics died at significantly younger ages (P<0.001). Univariate and multiple linear regression analyses showed that in addition to nonwhite ethnicity, heterozygous carriers for factor V Leiden (P=0.001) and obesity (P=0.002) are significantly associated with younger age at death. CONCLUSION: There are unique epidemiological differences in out-of-hospital fatal PE between ethnic groups in New York City.
PMID: 21555707
ISSN: 0009-7322
CID: 508762

Subtoxic levels hydrogen peroxide-induced production of interleukin-6 by retinal pigment epithelial cells

Wu, Wen-Chuan; Hu, Dan-Ning; Gao, Hua-Xin; Chen, Min; Wang, Dawei; Rosen, Richard; McCormick, Steven A
PURPOSE: To study the effect of subtoxic levels of hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) on the expression and release of interleukin-6 (IL-6) by cultured retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells and to explore the relevant signal pathways. METHODS: Cultured human RPE cells were stimulated with various subtoxic concentrations of H(2)O(2) for different periods. Conditioned medium and cells were collected. IL-6 in the medium and IL-6 mRNA in the collected cells were measured using an IL-6 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kit and reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction, respectively. Nuclear factor-kappaB (NF-kappaB) in nuclear extracts and phosphorylated p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), extracellular signal-regulated kinase (ERK), and c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNK) in cells cultured with and without H(2)O(2) were measured by NF-kappaB and MAPK enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kits. Inhibitors of p38 (SB203580), ERK (UO1026), JNK (SP600125), and NF-kappaB (BAY11-7082) were added to the cultures before the addition of H(2)O(2) to test their effects(.) RESULTS: Subtoxic levels of H(2)O(2) (100 microM and less) increased the IL-6 mRNA level and the release of IL-6 protein by the cultured human RPE cells in a dose- and time-dependent manner. This was accompanied by an increase of NF-kappaB in nuclear extracts and phosphorylated p38 MAPK, ERK, and JNK in cell lysates, particularly in the p38 and NF-kappaB. The NF-kappaB inhibitor decreased the H(2)O(2)-induced expression of IL-6. The p38 inhibitor, but not the ERK or JNK inhibitor, completely abolished H(2)O(2)-induced expression of IL-6 by RPE cells. The p38 inhibitor also abolished the increase of NF-kappaB in nuclear extracts in cells treated with H(2)O(2). CONCLUSIONS: H(2)O(2) stimulated the production of IL-6, a key factor in the modulation of immune responses, inflammatory processes, and the occurrence of autoimmune diseases, which recently has been documented to be increased in age-related macular degeneration (AMD). This may be a molecular linkage for the oxidative stress and inflammatory/autoimmune reactions in AMD and may provide a novel target for the treatment of AMD.
PMCID:2956668
PMID: 21031020
ISSN: 1090-0535
CID: 508772

Cardiac Channelopathies Linked to Sudden Infant Death Syndrome/Sudden Unexplained Death Syndrome

Wang, Dawei; Siegel, Donald; Tang, Yingying; Prinz, Mechthild; Sampson, Barbara
ORIGINAL:0008448
ISSN: n/a
CID: 508872

A Rac-cGMP signaling pathway

Guo, Dagang; Tan, Ying-cai; Wang, Dawei; Madhusoodanan, K S; Zheng, Yi; Maack, Thomas; Zhang, J Jillian; Huang, Xin-Yun
The small GTPase Rac and the second messenger cGMP (guanosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate) are critical regulators of diverse cell functions. When activated by extracellular signals via membrane signaling receptors, Rac executes its functions through engaging downstream effectors such as p21-activated kinase (PAK), a serine/threonine protein kinase. However, the molecular mechanism by which membrane signaling receptors regulate cGMP levels is not known. Here we have uncovered a signaling pathway linking Rac to the increase of cellular cGMP. We show that Rac uses PAK to directly activate transmembrane guanylyl cyclases (GCs), leading to increased cellular cGMP levels. This Rac/PAK/GC/cGMP pathway is involved in platelet-derived growth factor-induced fibroblast cell migration and lamellipodium formation. Our findings connect two important regulators of cellular physiological functions and provide a general mechanism for diverse receptors to modulate physiological responses through elevating cellular cGMP levels.
PMCID:1965458
PMID: 17254971
ISSN: 0092-8674
CID: 508782