Genome-wide association and multi-omic analyses reveal ACTN2 as a gene linked to heart failure

Heart failure is a major public health problem affecting over 23 million people worldwide. In this study, we present the results of a large scale meta-analysis of heart failure GWAS and replication in a comparable sized cohort to identify one known and two novel loci associated with heart failure. H...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2020-02, Vol.11 (1), p.1122-12, Article 1122
Hauptverfasser: Arvanitis, Marios, Tampakakis, Emmanouil, Zhang, Yanxiao, Wang, Wei, Auton, Adam, Dutta, Diptavo, Glavaris, Stephanie, Keramati, Ali, Chatterjee, Nilanjan, Chi, Neil C., Ren, Bing, Post, Wendy S., Battle, Alexis
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Heart failure is a major public health problem affecting over 23 million people worldwide. In this study, we present the results of a large scale meta-analysis of heart failure GWAS and replication in a comparable sized cohort to identify one known and two novel loci associated with heart failure. Heart failure sub-phenotyping shows that a new locus in chromosome 1 is associated with left ventricular adverse remodeling and clinical heart failure, in response to different initial cardiac muscle insults. Functional characterization and fine-mapping of that locus reveal a putative causal variant in a cardiac muscle specific regulatory region activated during cardiomyocyte differentiation that binds to the ACTN2 gene, a crucial structural protein inside the cardiac sarcolemma (Hi-C interaction p -value = 0.00002). Genome-editing in human embryonic stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes confirms the influence of the identified regulatory region in the expression of ACTN2 . Our findings extend our understanding of biological mechanisms underlying heart failure. Heart failure has a heterogeneous etiology and the genetic underpinnings are not well understood. Here, Arvanitis et al. perform GWAS meta-analysis including 10,976 heart failure cases and 437,573 controls, identify new loci near ABO and ACTN2 and show that deletion of a ACTN2 enhancer leads to reduced ACTN2 expression in differentiating cardiomyocytes.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/s41467-020-14843-7