Therapeutic Targets for Heart Failure Identified Using Proteomics and Mendelian Randomization

Author:

Henry Albert123ORCID,Gordillo-Marañón María12ORCID,Finan Chris124,Schmidt Amand F.124,Ferreira João Pedro56ORCID,Karra Ravi78ORCID,Sundström Johan910ORCID,Lind Lars9ORCID,Ärnlöv Johan1112ORCID,Zannad Faiez6ORCID,Mälarstig Anders1314,Hingorani Aroon D.12,Lumbers R. Thomas2315ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Cardiovascular Science (A.H., M.G.-M., C.F., A.F.S., A.D.H.), University College London, United Kingdom.

2. British Heart Foundation Research Accelerator (A.H., M.G.-M., C.F., A.F.S., A.D.H., R.T.L.), University College London, United Kingdom.

3. Institute of Health Informatics (A.H., R.T.L.), University College London, United Kingdom.

4. Department of Cardiology, Division of Heart and Lungs, University Medical Center Utrecht, The Netherlands (C.F., A.F.S.).

5. Unidade de Investigação e Desenvolvimento Cardiovascular, Rede de Investigação em Saúde, Department of Surgery and Physiology, Faculty of Medicine of the University of Porto, Portugal (J.P.F.).

6. Université de Lorraine, Inserm, Centre d’Investigations Cliniques - Plurithématique 14-33, and Inserm U1116, Centre Hospitalier Régional Universitaire, French Clinical Research Infrastructure Network, Investigation Network Initiative - Cardiovascular and Renal Clinical Trialists, Nancy, France (J.P.F., F.Z.).

7. Division of Cardiology, Department of Medicine (R.K.), Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC.

8. Department of Pathology (R.K.), Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC.

9. Department of Medical Sciences, Uppsala University, Sweden (J.S., L.L.).

10. The George Institute for Global Health, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia (J.S.).

11. School of Health and Social Studies, Dalarna University, Falun, Sweden (J.Ä.).

12. Division of Family Medicine and Primary Care, Department of Neurobiology, Care Science and Society, Karolinska Institutet, Huddinge, Sweden (J.Ä.).

13. Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Karolinska Institute, Solna‚ Sweden (A.M.).

14. Emerging Science and Innovation, Pfizer Worldwide Research, Development and Medical, Cambridge, MA (A.M.).

15. Health Data Research UK London (R.T.L.), University College London, United Kingdom.

Abstract

Background: Heart failure (HF) is a highly prevalent disorder for which disease mechanisms are incompletely understood. The discovery of disease-associated proteins with causal genetic evidence provides an opportunity to identify new therapeutic targets. Methods: We investigated the observational and causal associations of 90 cardiovascular proteins, which were measured using affinity-based proteomic assays. First, we estimated the associations of 90 cardiovascular proteins with incident heart failure by means of a fixed-effect meta-analysis of 4 population-based studies, composed of a total of 3019 participants with 732 HF events. The causal effects of HF-associated proteins were then investigated by Mendelian randomization, using cis -protein quantitative loci genetic instruments identified from genomewide association studies in more than 30 000 individuals. To improve the precision of causal estimates, we implemented an Mendelian randomization model that accounted for linkage disequilibrium between instruments and tested the robustness of causal estimates through a multiverse sensitivity analysis that included up to 120 combinations of instrument selection parameters and Mendelian randomization models per protein. The druggability of candidate proteins was surveyed, and mechanism of action and potential on-target side effects were explored with cross-trait Mendelian randomization analysis. Results: Forty-four of ninety proteins were positively associated with risk of incident HF ( P <6.0×10 –4 ). Among these, 8 proteins had evidence of a causal association with HF that was robust to multiverse sensitivity analysis: higher CSF-1 (macrophage colony-stimulating factor 1), Gal-3 (galectin-3) and KIM-1 (kidney injury molecule 1) were positively associated with risk of HF, whereas higher ADM (adrenomedullin), CHI3L1 (chitinase-3-like protein 1), CTSL1 (cathepsin L1), FGF-23 (fibroblast growth factor 23), and MMP-12 (matrix metalloproteinase-12) were protective. Therapeutics targeting ADM and Gal-3 are currently under evaluation in clinical trials, and all the remaining proteins were considered druggable, except KIM-1. Conclusions: We identified 44 circulating proteins that were associated with incident HF, of which 8 showed evidence of a causal relationship and 7 were druggable, including adrenomedullin, which represents a particularly promising drug target. Our approach demonstrates a tractable roadmap for the triangulation of population genomic and proteomic data for the prioritization of therapeutic targets for complex human diseases.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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