HBEGF, SRA1, and IK: Three cosegregating genes as determinants of cardiomyopathy

  1. Frauke Friedrichs1,2,
  2. Christian Zugck1,
  3. Gerd-Jörg Rauch1,
  4. Boris Ivandic1,
  5. Dieter Weichenhan1,
  6. Margit Müller-Bardorff3,
  7. Benjamin Meder1,
  8. Nour Eddine El Mokhtari4,
  9. Vera Regitz-Zagrosek5,
  10. Roland Hetzer5,
  11. Arne Schäfer6,7,
  12. Stefan Schreiber6,
  13. Jian Chen8,
  14. Isaac Neuhaus8,
  15. Ruiru Ji8,
  16. Nathan O. Siemers8,
  17. Norbert Frey1,
  18. Wolfgang Rottbauer1,
  19. Hugo A. Katus1,9 and
  20. Monika Stoll2,9,10
  1. 1Division of Cardiology, Angiology and Pulmonology, University Hospital Heidelberg, Heidelberg 69120, Germany;
  2. 2Genetic Epidemiology of Vascular Disorders, Leibniz-Institute for Arteriosclerosis Research at the University Münster, Münster 48149, Germany;
  3. 3Division of Cardiology, University Clinics Schleswig-Holstein Lübeck, Lübeck 23538, Germany;
  4. 4Division of Cardiology, University Clinics Schleswig-Holstein Kiel, Kiel 24105, Germany;
  5. 5Deutsches Herzzentrum Berlin, Berlin 13353, Germany;
  6. 6Institute for Clinical Molecular Biology, Christian-Albrechts-University Kiel, Kiel 24105, Germany;
  7. 7PopGen Biobank, Christian-Albrechts-University Kiel, Kiel 24105, Germany;
  8. 8Bristol-Myers Squibb Research and Development, Pennington, New Jersey 08543, USA
    1. 9 These authors contributed equally to this work.

    Abstract

    Human dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), a disorder of the cardiac muscle, causes considerable morbidity and mortality and is one of the major causes of sudden cardiac death. Genetic factors play a role in the etiology and pathogenesis of DCM. Disease-associated genetic variations identified to date have been identified in single families or single sporadic patients and explain a minority of the etiology of DCM. We show that a 600-kb region of linkage disequilibrium (LD) on 5q31.2-3, harboring multiple genes, is associated with cardiomyopathy in three independent Caucasian populations (combined P-value = 0.00087). Functional assessment in zebrafish demonstrates that at least three genes, orthologous to loci in this LD block, HBEGF, IK, and SRA1, result independently in a phenotype of myocardial contractile dysfunction when their expression is reduced with morpholino antisense reagents. Evolutionary analysis across multiple vertebrate genomes suggests that this heart failure-associated LD block emerged by a series of genomic rearrangements across amphibian, avian, and mammalian genomes and is maintained as a cluster in mammals. Taken together, these observations challenge the simple notion that disease phenotypes can be traced to altered function of a single locus within a haplotype and suggest that a more detailed assessment of causality can be necessary.

    Footnotes

    • 10 Corresponding author.

      E-mail mstoll{at}uni-muenster.de; fax 49-251-83-56205.

    • [Supplemental material is available online at www.genome.org.]

    • Article published online before print. Article and publication date are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.076653.108.

      • Received January 29, 2008.
      • Accepted December 3, 2008.

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