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Rare Loss-of-function Mutations of PTGIR are enriched in Fibromuscular Dysplasia.

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journal contribution
posted on 2021-03-18, 13:06 authored by Adrien Georges, Juliette Albuisson, Takiy Berrandou, Délia Dupré, Aurélien Lorthioir, Valentina D'Escamard, Antonio F Di Narzo, Daniella Kadian-Dodov, Jeffrey W Olin, Ewa Warchol-Celinska, Aleksander Prejbisz, Andrzej Januszewicz, Patrick Bruneval, Anna A Baranowska, Tom R Webb, Stephen E Hamby, Nilesh J Samani, David Adlam, Natalia Fendrikova-Mahlay, Stanley Hazen, Yu Wang, Min-Lee Yang, Kristina Hunker, Nicolas Combaret, Pascal Motreff, Antoine Chédid, Béatrice Fiquet, Pierre-François Plouin, Elie Mousseaux, Arshid Azarine, Laurence Amar, Michel Azizi, Heather L Gornik, Santhi K Ganesh, Jason C Kovacic, Xavier Jeunemaitre, Nabila Bouatia-Naji
Aims
Fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) and spontaneous coronary artery dissection (SCAD) are related, non-atherosclerotic arterial diseases mainly affecting middle-aged women. Little is known about their physiopathological mechanisms. We aimed to identify rare genetic causes to elucidate molecular mechanisms implicated in FMD and SCAD.

Methods and results
We analysed 29 exomes that included familial and sporadic FMD. We identified one rare loss-of-function variant (LoF) (frequencygnomAD = 0.000075) shared by two FMD sisters in the prostaglandin I2 receptor gene (PTGIR), a key player in vascular remodelling. Follow-up was conducted by targeted or Sanger sequencing (1071 FMD and 363 SCAD patients) or lookups in exome (264 FMD) or genome sequences (480 SCAD), all independent and unrelated. It revealed four additional LoF allele carriers, in addition to several rare missense variants, among FMD patients, and two LoF allele carriers among SCAD patients, including one carrying a rare splicing mutation (c.768 + 1C>G). We used burden test to test for enrichment in patients compared to gnomAD controls, which detected a putative enrichment in FMD (PTRAPD = 8 × 10−4), but not a significant enrichment (PTRAPD = 0.12) in SCAD. The biological effects of variants on human prostaclycin receptor (hIP) signalling and protein expression were characterized using transient overexpression in human cells. We confirmed the LoFs (Q163X and P17RfsX6) and one missense (L67P), identified in one FMD and one SCAD patient, to severely impair hIP function in vitro.

Conclusions
Our study shows that rare genetic mutations in PTGIR are enriched among FMD patients and found in SCAD patients, suggesting a role for prostacyclin signalling in non-atherosclerotic stenosis and dissection.

History

Citation

Cardiovascular Research, cvaa161, https://doi.org/10.1093/cvr/cvaa161

Author affiliation

Department of Cardiovascular Sciences

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

Cardiovascular research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

issn

0008-6363

eissn

1755-3245

Acceptance date

2020-06-07

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2021-03-18

Spatial coverage

England

Language

eng

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