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FHL5 Controls Vascular Disease-Associated Gene Programs in Smooth Muscle Cells

Authors :
Doris Wong
Gaëlle Auguste
Christian L. Lino Cardenas
Adam W. Turner
Yixuan Chen
Yipei Song
Lijiang Ma
R. Noah Perry
Redouane Aherrahrou
Maniselvan Kuppusamy
Chaojie Yang
Jose Verdezoto Mosquera
Collin J. Dube
Mohammad Daud Khan
Meredith Palmore
Jaspreet Kalra
Maryam Kavousi
Patricia A. Peyser
Ljubica Matic
Ulf Hedin
Ani Manichaikul
Swapnil K. Sonkusare
Mete Civelek
Jason C. Kovacic
Johan L.M. Björkegren
Rajeev Malhotra
Clint L. Miller
Epidemiology
Source :
Circulation Research, 132(9), 1144-1161. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2023.

Abstract

Background: Genome-wide association studies have identified hundreds of loci associated with common vascular diseases, such as coronary artery disease, myocardial infarction, and hypertension. However, the lack of mechanistic insights for many GWAS loci limits their translation into the clinic. Among these loci with unknown functions is UFL1 –four-and-a-half LIM (LIN-11, Isl-1, MEC-3) domain 5 ( FHL5 ; chr6q16.1), which reached genome-wide significance in a recent coronary artery disease/ myocardial infarction GWAS meta-analysis. UFL1-FHL5 is also associated with several vascular diseases, consistent with the widespread pleiotropy observed for GWAS loci. Methods: We apply a multimodal approach leveraging statistical fine-mapping, epigenomic profiling, and ex vivo analysis of human coronary artery tissues to implicate FHL5 as the top candidate causal gene. We unravel the molecular mechanisms of the cross-phenotype genetic associations through in vitro functional analyses and epigenomic profiling experiments in coronary artery smooth muscle cells. Results: We prioritized FHL5 as the top candidate causal gene at the UFL1-FHL5 locus through expression quantitative trait locus colocalization methods. FHL5 gene expression was enriched in the smooth muscle cells and pericyte population in human artery tissues with coexpression network analyses supporting a functional role in regulating smooth muscle cell contraction. Unexpectedly, under procalcifying conditions, FHL5 overexpression promoted vascular calcification and dysregulated processes related to extracellular matrix organization and calcium handling. Lastly, by mapping FHL5 binding sites and inferring FHL5 target gene function using artery tissue gene regulatory network analyses, we highlight regulatory interactions between FHL5 and downstream coronary artery disease/myocardial infarction loci, such as FOXL1 and FN1 that have roles in vascular remodeling. Conclusions: Taken together, these studies provide mechanistic insights into the pleiotropic genetic associations of UFL1-FHL5. We show that FHL5 mediates vascular disease risk through transcriptional regulation of downstream vascular remodeling gene programs. These transacting mechanisms may explain a portion of the heritable risk for complex vascular diseases.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15244571 and 00097330
Volume :
132
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5fe5ac5ce89e69f5b733b655149c1b64