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Genomic structural variations lead to dysregulation of important coding and non‐coding RNA species in dilated cardiomyopathy

Authors :
Jan Haas
Stefan Mester
Alan Lai
Karen S Frese
Farbod Sedaghat‐Hamedani
Elham Kayvanpour
Tobias Rausch
Rouven Nietsch
Jes‐Niels Boeckel
Avisha Carstensen
Mirko Völkers
Carsten Dietrich
Dietmar Pils
Ali Amr
Daniel B Holzer
Diana Martins Bordalo
Daniel Oehler
Tanja Weis
Derliz Mereles
Sebastian Buss
Eva Riechert
Emil Wirsz
Maximilian Wuerstle
Jan O Korbel
Andreas Keller
Hugo A Katus
Andreas E Posch
Benjamin Meder
Source :
EMBO Molecular Medicine, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 107-120 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Nature, 2017.

Abstract

Abstract The transcriptome needs to be tightly regulated by mechanisms that include transcription factors, enhancers, and repressors as well as non‐coding RNAs. Besides this dynamic regulation, a large part of phenotypic variability of eukaryotes is expressed through changes in gene transcription caused by genetic variation. In this study, we evaluate genome‐wide structural genomic variants (SVs) and their association with gene expression in the human heart. We detected 3,898 individual SVs affecting all classes of gene transcripts (e.g., mRNA, miRNA, lncRNA) and regulatory genomic regions (e.g., enhancer or TFBS). In a cohort of patients (n = 50) with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), 80,635 non‐protein‐coding elements of the genome are deleted or duplicated by SVs, containing 3,758 long non‐coding RNAs and 1,756 protein‐coding transcripts. 65.3% of the SV‐eQTLs do not harbor a significant SNV‐eQTL, and for the regions with both classes of association, we find similar effect sizes. In case of deleted protein‐coding exons, we find downregulation of the associated transcripts, duplication events, however, do not show significant changes over all events. In summary, we are first to describe the genomic variability associated with SVs in heart failure due to DCM and dissect their impact on the transcriptome. Overall, SVs explain up to 7.5% of the variation of cardiac gene expression, underlining the importance to study human myocardial gene expression in the context of the individual genome. This has immediate implications for studies on basic mechanisms of cardiac maladaptation, biomarkers, and (gene) therapeutic studies alike.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17574676 and 17574684
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
EMBO Molecular Medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4481e23c5007408586f68c9d973d8b8f
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.15252/emmm.201707838