Contribution of genetic variants in the development of familial premature coronary artery disease in a cohort of cardiac patients

Author:

Mehvari Sepideh1ORCID,Karimian Fathi Nahid1,Saki Sara2,Asadnezhad Maryam1,Arzhangi Sanaz1,Ghodratpour Fatemeh1,Mohseni Marzieh1ORCID,Zare Ashrafi Farzane1,Sadeghian Saeed3,Boroumand Mohammadali3,Shokohizadeh Fatemeh3,Rostami Elham3,Boroumand Rahnama3,Najafipour Reza1,Malekzadeh Reza2,Riazalhosseini Yasser4,Akbari Mohammadreza5ORCID,Lathrop Mark4,Najmabadi Hossein1ORCID,Hosseini Kaveh3,Kahrizi Kimia14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Genetics Research Center University of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Sciences Tehran Iran

2. Digestive Disease Research Institute Tehran University of Medical Sciences Tehran Iran

3. Tehran Heart Center, Cardiovascular Diseases Research Institute Tehran University of Medical Sciences Tehran Iran

4. McGill Genome Centre Montreal Quebec Canada

5. Women's College Research Institute University of Toronto Toronto Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractCoronary artery disease (CAD), the most prevalent cardiovascular disease, is the leading cause of death worldwide. Heritable factors play a significant role in the pathogenesis of CAD. It has been proposed that approximately one‐third of patients with CAD have a positive family history, and individuals with such history are at ~1.5‐fold increased risk of CAD in their lifespans. Accordingly, the long‐recognized familial clustering of CAD is a strong risk factor for this disease. Our study aimed to identify candidate genetic variants contributing to CAD by studying a cohort of 60 large Iranian families with at least two members in different generations afflicted with premature CAD (PCAD), defined as established disease at ≤45 years in men and ≤55 years in women. Exome sequencing was performed for a subset of the affected individuals, followed by prioritization and Sanger sequencing of candidate variants in all available family members. Subsequently, apparently healthy carriers of potential risk variants underwent coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA), followed by co‐segregation analysis of the combined data. Putative causal variants were identified in seven genes, ABCG8, CD36, CYP27A1, PIK3C2G, RASSF9, RYR2, and ZFYVE21, co‐segregating with familial PCAD in seven unrelated families. Among these, PIK3C2G, RASSF9, and ZFYVE21 are novel candidate CAD susceptibility genes. Our findings indicate that rare variants in genes identified in this study are involved in CAD development.

Funder

Iran National Science Foundation

University of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

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