Author:
Mongelli A.,Panunzi S.,Nesta M.,Gottardi Zamperla M.,Atlante S.,Barbi V.,Mongiardini V.,Ferraro F.,De Martino S.,Cis L.,Re A.,Maltese S.,Bachetti T.,La Rovere M. T.,Martelli F.,Pesce M.,Nanni S.,Massetti M.,Pontecorvi A.,Farsetti A.,Gaetano C.
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The present study investigates whether epigenetic differences emerge in the heart of patients undergoing cardiac surgery for an aortic valvular replacement (AVR) or coronary artery bypass graft (CABG). An algorithm is also established to determine how the pathophysiological condition might influence the human biological cardiac age.
Results
Blood samples and cardiac auricles were collected from patients who underwent cardiac procedures: 94 AVR and 289 CABG. The CpGs from three independent blood-derived biological clocks were selected to design a new blood- and the first cardiac-specific clocks. Specifically, 31 CpGs from six age-related genes, ELOVL2, EDARADD, ITGA2B, ASPA, PDE4C, and FHL2, were used to construct the tissue-tailored clocks. The best-fitting variables were combined to define new cardiac- and blood-tailored clocks validated through neural network analysis and elastic regression. In addition, telomere length (TL) was measured by qPCR. These new methods revealed a similarity between chronological and biological age in the blood and heart; the average TL was significantly higher in the heart than in the blood. In addition, the cardiac clock discriminated well between AVR and CABG and was sensitive to cardiovascular risk factors such as obesity and smoking. Moreover, the cardiac-specific clock identified an AVR patient's subgroup whose accelerated bioage correlated with the altered ventricular parameters, including left ventricular diastolic and systolic volume.
Conclusion
This study reports on applying a method to evaluate the cardiac biological age revealing epigenetic features that separate subgroups of AVR and CABG.
Funder
Ricerca Corrente - Rete cardiologica IRCCS
Rete Aging "Next Promising" Ricerca Corrente 2022
Telethon-Italy
French Muscular Dystrophy Association
EU Horizon 2020 project COVIRNA
EU-CardioRNA COST Action
Associazione Italiana Per La Ricerca Sul Cancro Airc
Italian Ministry of Health
Italian Ministry of Education University and Research
Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche
Regione Lombardia
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Genetics (clinical),Developmental Biology,Genetics,Molecular Biology
Cited by
6 articles.
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