Gene expression profiles of ischemic stroke clots retrieved by mechanical thrombectomy are associated with disease etiology

Author:

Tutino Vincent MORCID,Fricano Sarah,Chien Aichi,Patel Tatsat RORCID,Monteiro Andre,Rai Hamid HORCID,Dmytriw Adam AORCID,Chaves Lee DORCID,Waqas MuhammadORCID,Levy Elad IORCID,Poppenberg Kerry E,Siddiqui Adnan HORCID

Abstract

BackgroundDetermining stroke etiology is crucial for secondary prevention, but intensive workups fail to classify ~30% of strokes that are cryptogenic.ObjectiveTo examine the hypothesis that the transcriptomic profiles of clots retrieved during mechanical thrombectomy are unique to strokes of different subtypes.MethodsWe isolated RNA from the clots of 73 patients undergoing mechanical thrombectomy. Samples of sufficient quality were subjected to 100-cycle, paired-end RNAseq, and transcriptomes with less than 10 million unique reads were excluded from analysis. Significant differentially expressed genes (DEGs) between subtypes (defined by the Trial of Org 10 172 in Acute Stroke Treatment) were identified by expression analysis in edgeR. Gene ontology enrichment analysis was used to study the biologic differences between stroke etiologies.ResultsIn all, 38 clot transcriptomes were analyzed; 6 from large artery atherosclerosis (LAA), 21 from cardioembolism (CE), 5 from strokes of other determined origin, and 6 from cryptogenic strokes. Among all comparisons, there were 816 unique DEGs, 174 of which were shared by at least two comparisons, and 20 of which were shared by all three. Gene ontology analysis showed that CE clots reflected high levels of inflammation, LAA clots had greater oxidoreduction and T-cell processes, and clots of other determined origin were enriched for aberrant platelet and hemoglobin-related processes. Principal component analysis indicated separation between these subtypes and showed cryptogenic samples clustered among several different groups.ConclusionsExpression profiles of stroke clots were identified between stroke etiologies and reflected different biologic responses. Cryptogenic thrombi may be related to multiple etiologies.

Funder

National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

James H. Cummings Foundation

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Neurology (clinical),General Medicine,Surgery

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