Indirect epigenetic testing identifies a diagnostic signature of cardiomyocyte DNA methylation in heart failure

Precision-based molecular phenotyping of heart failure must overcome limited access to cardiac tissue. Although epigenetic alterations have been found to underlie pathological cardiac gene dysregulation, the clinical utility of myocardial epigenomics remains narrow owing to limited clinical access t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Basic research in cardiology 2023-03, Vol.118 (1), p.9-9, Article 9
Hauptverfasser: Oeing, Christian U., Pepin, Mark E., Saul, Kerstin B., Agircan, Ayça Seyhan, Assenov, Yassen, Merkel, Tobias S., Sedaghat-Hamedani, Farbod, Weis, Tanja, Meder, Benjamin, Guan, Kaomei, Plass, Christoph, Weichenhan, Dieter, Siede, Dominik, Backs, Johannes
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Precision-based molecular phenotyping of heart failure must overcome limited access to cardiac tissue. Although epigenetic alterations have been found to underlie pathological cardiac gene dysregulation, the clinical utility of myocardial epigenomics remains narrow owing to limited clinical access to tissue. Therefore, the current study determined whether patient plasma confers indirect phenotypic, transcriptional, and/or epigenetic alterations to ex vivo cardiomyocytes to mirror the failing human myocardium. Neonatal rat ventricular myocytes (NRVMs) and single-origin human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes ( hiPSC-CMs ) and were treated with blood plasma samples from patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and donor subjects lacking history of cardiovascular disease. Following plasma treatments, NRVMs and hiPSC-CMs underwent significant hypertrophy relative to non-failing controls, as determined via automated high-content screening. Array-based DNA methylation analysis of plasma-treated hiPSC-CMs and cardiac biopsies uncovered robust, and conserved, alterations in cardiac DNA methylation, from which 100 sites were validated using an independent cohort. Among the CpG sites identified, hypo-methylation of the ATG promoter was identified as a diagnostic marker of HF, wherein cg03800765 methylation (AUC = 0.986, P  
ISSN:1435-1803
0300-8428
1435-1803
DOI:10.1007/s00395-022-00954-3