|  Help  |  About  |  Contact Us

Publication : Primary cilia defects causing mitral valve prolapse.

First Author  Toomer KA Year  2019
Journal  Sci Transl Med Volume  11
Issue  493 PubMed ID  31118289
Mgi Jnum  J:291454 Mgi Id  MGI:6444960
Doi  10.1126/scitranslmed.aax0290 Citation  Toomer KA, et al. (2019) Primary cilia defects causing mitral valve prolapse. Sci Transl Med 11(493)
abstractText  Mitral valve prolapse (MVP) affects 1 in 40 people and is the most common indication for mitral valve surgery. MVP can cause arrhythmias, heart failure, and sudden cardiac death, and to date, the causes of this disease are poorly understood. We now demonstrate that defects in primary cilia genes and their regulated pathways can cause MVP in familial and sporadic nonsyndromic MVP cases. Our expression studies and genetic ablation experiments confirmed a role for primary cilia in regulating ECM deposition during cardiac development. Loss of primary cilia during development resulted in progressive myxomatous degeneration and profound mitral valve pathology in the adult setting. Analysis of a large family with inherited, autosomal dominant nonsyndromic MVP identified a deleterious missense mutation in a cilia gene, DZIP1 A mouse model harboring this variant confirmed the pathogenicity of this mutation and revealed impaired ciliogenesis during development, which progressed to adult myxomatous valve disease and functional MVP. Relevance of primary cilia in common forms of MVP was tested using pathway enrichment in a large population of patients with MVP and controls from previously generated genome-wide association studies (GWAS), which confirmed the involvement of primary cilia genes in MVP. Together, our studies establish a developmental basis for MVP through altered cilia-dependent regulation of ECM and suggest that defects in primary cilia genes can be causative to disease phenotype in some patients with MVP.
Quick Links:
 
Quick Links:
 

Expression

Publication --> Expression annotations

 

Other

20 Bio Entities

Trail: Publication

0 Expression