Mining the plasma proteome for insights into the molecular pathology of pulmonary arterial hypertension.
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Supporting information
Author(s)
Type
Journal Article
Abstract
RATIONALE: Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is characterized by structural remodelling of pulmonary arteries and arterioles. Underlying biological processes are likely reflected in a perturbation of circulating proteins. OBJECTIVES: To quantify and analyse the plasma proteome of PAH patients using inherited genetic variation to inform on underlying molecular drivers. METHODS: An aptamer-based assay was used to measure plasma proteins in 357 patients with idiopathic or heritable PAH, 103 healthy volunteers and 23 relatives of PAH patients. In discovery and replication subgroups, the plasma proteomes of PAH and healthy individuals were compared and the relationship to transplantation-free survival in PAH determined. To examine causal relationships to PAH, protein quantitative trait loci (pQTL) that influenced protein levels in the patient population were used as instruments for Mendelian randomisation (MR) analysis. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: From 4,152 annotated plasma proteins, levels of 208 differed between PAH patients and healthy subjects and 49 predicted long-term survival. MR based on cis-pQTL located in proximity to the encoding gene for proteins that were prognostic and distinguished PAH from health estimated an adverse effect for higher levels of netrin-4 (odds ratio [OR] 1.55, 95%-confidence interval [CI] 1.16-2.08) and a protective effect for higher levels of thrombospondin-2 (OR 0.83, 95%-CI 0.74-0.94) on PAH. Both proteins tracked the development of PAH in previously healthy relatives and changes in thrombospondin-2 associated with pulmonary arterial pressure at disease onset. CONCLUSIONS: Integrated analysis of the plasma proteome and genome implicates two secreted matrix-binding proteins, netrin-4 and thrombospondin-2, in the pathobiology of PAH.
Date Issued
2022-04-08
Date Acceptance
2022-04-07
Citation
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine, 2022, 205 (12), pp.1-12
ISSN
1073-449X
Publisher
American Thoracic Society
Start Page
1
End Page
12
Journal / Book Title
American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine
Volume
205
Issue
12
Copyright Statement
© 2022 by the American Thoracic Society.
Sponsor
British Heart Foundation
The Academy of Medical Sciences
Identifier
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35394406
Grant Number
FS/15/59/31839
WMET_P76013
Subjects
Genome
Mendelian randomisation
case-control studies
protein quantitative trait loci
Publication Status
Published
Coverage Spatial
United States
Date Publish Online
2022-04-08