Identification of Rare Genetic Variants in Familial Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection and Evidence for Shared Biological Pathways

Author:

Turley Tamiel N.12,Theis Jeanne L.2ORCID,Evans Jared M.3,Fogarty Zachary C.3,Gulati Rajiv4,Hayes Sharonne N.4ORCID,Tweet Marysia S.4,Olson Timothy M.245ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Molecular Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics Track, Mayo Clinic Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA

2. Cardiovascular Genetics Research Laboratory, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA

3. Department of Quantitative Health Sciences, Division of Computational Biology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA

4. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA

5. Department of Pediatric and Adolescent Medicine, Division of Pediatric Cardiology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA

Abstract

Rare familial spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) kindreds implicate genetic disease predisposition and provide a unique opportunity for candidate gene discovery. Whole-genome sequencing was performed in fifteen probands with non-syndromic SCAD who had a relative with SCAD, eight of whom had a second relative with extra-coronary arteriopathy. Co-segregating variants and associated genes were prioritized by quantitative variant, gene, and disease-level metrics. Curated public databases were queried for functional relationships among encoded proteins. Fifty-four heterozygous coding variants in thirteen families co-segregated with disease and fulfilled primary filters of rarity, gene variation constraint, and predicted-deleterious protein effect. Secondary filters yielded 11 prioritized candidate genes in 12 families, with high arterial tissue expression (n = 7), high-confidence protein-level interactions with genes associated with SCAD previously (n = 10), and/or previous associations with connective tissue disorders and aortopathies (n = 3) or other vascular phenotypes in mice or humans (n = 11). High-confidence associations were identified among 10 familial SCAD candidate-gene-encoded proteins. A collagen-encoding gene was identified in five families, two with distinct variants in COL4A2. Familial SCAD is genetically heterogeneous, yet perturbations of extracellular matrix, cytoskeletal, and cell–cell adhesion proteins implicate common disease-susceptibility pathways. Incomplete penetrance and variable expression suggest genetic or environmental modifiers.

Funder

SCAD Research Inc.

Heller Foundation Inc.

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics

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