Complex roads from genotype to phenotype in dilated cardiomyopathy: scientific update from the Working Group of Myocardial Function of the European Society of Cardiology
Cardiovascular Research

Abstract
Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) frequently affects relatively young, economically, and socially active adults, and is an important cause of heart failure and transplantation. DCM is a complex disease and its pathological architecture encounters many genetic determinants interacting with environmental factors. The old perspective that every pathogenic gene mutation would lead to a diseased heart, is now being replaced by the novel observation that the phenotype depends not only on the penetrance—malignancy of the mutated gene—but also on epigenetics, age, toxic factors, pregnancy, and a diversity of acquired diseases. This review discusses how gene mutations will result in mutation-specific molecular alterations in the heart including increased mitochondrial oxidation (sarcomeric gene e.g.
This article is part of the Mini Review Series from the Varenna 2017 meeting of the Working Group of Myocardial Function of the European Society of Cardiology.
Contributors

Eloisa Arbustini
Author

Anna Bianco
Author

Michele Ciccarelli
Author

Dana Dawson
Author

Matteo De Rosa
Author

Nazha Hamdani
Author

Denise Hilfiker-Kleiner
Author

Benjamin Meder
Author

Adelino F Leite-Moreira
Author

Thomas Thum
Author

Carlo G Tocchetti
Author

Gilda Varricchi
Author

Jolanda Van der Velden
Author

Roddy Walsh
Author

Stephane Heymans
Author

