Epigenome-Wide Association Study Identifies Cardiac Gene Patterning and a Novel Class of Biomarkers for Heart Failure

Benjamin Meder(Statistics Austria), Jan Haas(Statistics Austria), Farbod Sedaghat‐Hamedani(Statistics Austria), Elham Kayvanpour(Statistics Austria), Karen Frese(Statistics Austria), Alan Lai(Statistics Austria), Rouven Nietsch(Statistics Austria), Christina Scheiner(Statistics Austria), Stefan Mester(Statistics Austria), Diana Martins Bordalo(Statistics Austria), Ali Amr(Statistics Austria), Carsten Dietrich(Statistics Austria), Dietmar Pils(Statistics Austria), Dominik Siede(Statistics Austria), Hauke Hund(Statistics Austria), Andrea S. Bauer(Statistics Austria), Daniel Benjamin Holzer(Statistics Austria), Arjang Ruhparwar(Statistics Austria), Matthias Mueller‐Hennessen(Statistics Austria), Dieter Weichenhan(Statistics Austria), Christoph Plass(Statistics Austria), Tanja Weis(Statistics Austria), Johannes Backs(Statistics Austria), Maximilian Wuerstle(Statistics Austria), Andreas Keller(Statistics Austria), Hugo A. Katus(Statistics Austria), Andreas E. Posch(Statistics Austria)
Circulation
August 24, 2017
Cited by 198

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Biochemical DNA modification resembles a crucial regulatory layer among genetic information, environmental factors, and the transcriptome. To identify epigenetic susceptibility regions and novel biomarkers linked to myocardial dysfunction and heart failure, we performed the first multi-omics study in myocardial tissue and blood of patients with dilated cardiomyopathy and controls. METHODS: Infinium human methylation 450 was used for high-density epigenome-wide mapping of DNA methylation in left-ventricular biopsies and whole peripheral blood of living probands. RNA deep sequencing was performed on the same samples in parallel. Whole-genome sequencing of all patients allowed exclusion of promiscuous genotype-induced methylation calls. RESULTS: . Twenty-seven (46%) of these loci could be replicated in independent cohorts, underlining the role of epigenetic regulation of key cardiac transcription regulators. Using a staged multi-omics study design, we link a subset of 517 epigenetic loci with dilated cardiomyopathy and cardiac gene expression. Furthermore, we identified distinct epigenetic methylation patterns that are conserved across tissues, rendering these CpGs novel epigenetic biomarkers for heart failure. CONCLUSIONS: The present study provides to our knowledge the first epigenome-wide association study in living patients with heart failure using a multi-omics approach.


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