4.7 Article

Factors Associated with Mutations: Their Matching Rates to Cardiovascular and Neurological Diseases

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22105057

Keywords

hypertension; congenital heart disease; thoracic aortic aneurysm; telomere; adenine thymine content; single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP); Parkinson's disease

Funding

  1. state of West Virginia startup fund at Marshall University
  2. WV-INBRE grant [NIH P20GM103434]
  3. COBRE ACCORD grant [P20GM121299]
  4. West Virginia Clinical and Translational Science Institute (WV-CTSI) grant [2U54GM104942]
  5. Office of the President at Marshall University
  6. National Institutes of Health [R15HL145573]

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In cardiovascular diseases, 64 genetic loci involving genetic mutations matched with specific factors related to monogenic hypertension, resulting in a matching rate of 81%. However, this high matching rate was not observed in genes associated with essential hypertension, thoracic aortic aneurysm, and congenital heart disease, with matching rates of 53%, 70%, and 75% respectively.
Monogenic hypertension is rare and caused by genetic mutations, but whether factors associated with mutations are disease-specific remains uncertain. Given two factors associated with high mutation rates, we tested how many previously known genes match with (i) proximity to telomeres or (ii) high adenine and thymine content in cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) related to vascular stiffening. We extracted genomic information using a genome data viewer. In human chromosomes, 64 of 79 genetic loci involving >25 rare mutations and single nucleotide polymorphisms satisfied (i) or (ii), resulting in an 81% matching rate. However, this high matching rate was no longer observed as we checked the two factors in genes associated with essential hypertension (EH), thoracic aortic aneurysm (TAA), and congenital heart disease (CHD), resulting in matching rates of 53%, 70%, and 75%, respectively. A matching of telomere proximity or high adenine and thymine content projects the list of loci involving rare mutations of monogenic hypertension better than those of other CVDs, likely due to adoption of rigorous criteria for true-positive signals. Our data suggest that the factor-disease matching rate is an accurate tool that can explain deleterious mutations of monogenic hypertension at a >80% match-unlike the relatively lower matching rates found in human genes of EH, TAA, CHD, and familial Parkinson's disease.

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