Disease areas:
  • heart and blood vessels
Last updated:
Author(s):
David S. M. Lee, Kathleen M. Cardone, David Y. Zhang, Noah L. Tsao, Sarah Abramowitz, Pranav Sharma, John S. DePaolo, Mitchell Conery, Krishna G. Aragam, Kiran Biddinger, Ozan Dilitikas, Lily Hoffman-Andrews, Renae L. Judy, Atlas Khan, Iftikhar J. Kullo, Megan J. Puckelwartz, Nosheen Reza, Benjamin A. Satterfield, Pankhuri Singhal, Zoltan Arany, Thomas P. Cappola, Eric D. Carruth, Sharlene M. Day, Ron Do, Christopher M. Haggerty, Jacob Joseph, Elizabeth M. McNally, Girish Nadkarni, Anjali T. Owens, Daniel J. Rader, Marylyn D. Ritchie, Yan V. Sun, Benjamin F. Voight, Michael G. Levin, Scott M. Damrauer
Publish date:
7 April 2025
Journal:
Nature Genetics
PubMed ID:
40195560

Abstract

Heart failure is a complex trait, influenced by environmental and genetic factors, affecting over 30 million individuals worldwide. Here we report common-variant and rare-variant association studies of all-cause heart failure and examine how different classes of genetic variation impact its heritability. We identify 176 common-variant risk loci at genome-wide significance in 2,358,556 individuals and cluster these signals into five broad modules based on pleiotropic associations with anthropomorphic traits/obesity, blood pressure/renal function, atherosclerosis/lipids, immune activity and arrhythmias. In parallel, we uncover exome-wide significant associations for heart failure and rare predicted loss-of-function variants in TTN, MYBPC3, FLNC and BAG3 using exome sequencing of 376,334 individuals. We find that total burden heritability of rare coding variants is highly concentrated in a small set of Mendelian cardiomyopathy genes, while common-variant heritability is diffusely spread throughout the genome. Finally, we show that common-variant background modifies heart failure risk among carriers of rare pathogenic truncating variants in TTN. Together, these findings discern genetic links between dysregulated metabolism and heart failure and highlight a polygenic component to heart failure not captured by current clinical genetic testing.

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Institution:
University of Pennsylvania, United States of America

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