| Literature DB >> 18823550 |
James West1, Joy Cogan, Mark Geraci, Linda Robinson, John Newman, John A Phillips, Kirk Lane, Barbara Meyrick, Jim Loyd.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While BMPR2 mutation strongly predisposes to pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), only 20% of mutation carriers develop clinical disease. This finding suggests that modifier genes contribute to FPAH clinical expression. Since modifiers are likely to be common alleles, this problem is not tractable by traditional genetic approaches. Furthermore, examination of gene expression is complicated by confounding effects attributable to drugs and the disease process itself.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18823550 PMCID: PMC2561034 DOI: 10.1186/1755-8794-1-45
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genomics ISSN: 1755-8794 Impact factor: 3.063
Subject Data
| 1218 | F | Non-carrier | 41 | ||
| 1217 | F | Non-carrier | 36 | ||
| 1741 | F | Non-carrier | 61 | ||
| 1688 | F | Non-carrier | 56 | ||
| 1729 | F | Non-carrier | 67 | ||
| 1744 | M | Non-carrier | 53 | ||
| 1569 | M | Non-carrier | 65 | ||
| 1227 | M | Non-carrier | 39 | ||
| 1745 | F | Unaffected Carrier | 51 | ||
| 1731 | F | Unaffected Carrier | 57 | ||
| 1746 | F | Unaffected Carrier | 48 | ||
| 176 | F | Unaffected Carrier | 88 | * | |
| 172 | F | Unaffected Carrier | 65 | * | |
| 1742 | M | Unaffected Carrier | 59 | ||
| 180 | M | Unaffected Carrier | 66 | * | |
| 1727 | F | Affected | 15 | 13 | |
| 723 | F | Affected | 35 | 29 | * |
| 264 | F | Affected | 17 | 9 | * |
| 266 | M | Affected | 39 | 26 | * |
| 186 | M | Affected | 29 | 24 | * |
Primer Sequences
| Gene | Forward | Reverse | Product Size |
| B-Actin | GGA TGC CTC TCT TGC TCT G | GTC TTC CCC TCC ATC GTG | 106 bp |
| CYP1B1 | AAC GTA CCG GCC ACT ATC AC | ACG ACC TGA TCC AAT TCT GC | 137 bp |
| NR2F2 | CCA AGA GCA AGT GGA GAA GC | AGG CAT CTG AGG TGA ACA GG | 92 bp |
| PRKCH | TAT TCG ATG TCA AGC GAA CG | ATA TTT CCG GGT TGG AGA CC | 96 bp |
| RHOC | GAG AGC TGG CCA AGA TGA AG | GCA CTC AAG GTA GCC AAA GG | 92 bp |
| SEPT10 | CAT GAG TTC CAT GGT GAA CG | GCT CAA ATT TGG CCT GTA GC | 124 bp |
| TWSG1 | AAT GTT CAC GCG CCT TAT TC | AAC CAG CGA TAT TTG GAT GC | 128 bp |
Figure 1Ontology grouping of genes differentially regulated in BMPR2 mutation carriers with pulmonary hypertension compared to BMPR2 mutation carriers without disease. Study design aimed to avoid disease and drug effects, meaning that these should represent predisposition to disease rather than disease effect.
Figure 2(A) Expression of selected genes in a larger sample set trends in the same direction as in arrays by quantitative RT-PCR, but both fold-changes and significance are reduced compared to the more limited sample set. The exception is CYP1B1, in which both fold change and significance are maintained. Expression is normalized to that of beta-actin and then to expression level in non-carriers; p-values are by Kruskal-Wallis. (B) Expression of CYP1B1 is lower in female, but not male, mutation carriers with PAH compared to unaffected carriers and non-carriers. n = number of individuals in category; * = p < .01 for sex-specific effect in disease by two-way ANOVA on log-transformed values.
GTP-related genes are overrepresented in genes changed in affected BMPR2 Mutation Carriers
| # 723 | # 266 | # 264 | # 186 | |
| Genes Changed: | 757 | 386 | 569 | 628 |
| Expected GTP-related: | 37 | 19 | 28 | 31 |
| Actual GTP-related: | 88 | 54 | 67 | 71 |
| z-score | 5.4 | 4.8 | 4.8 | 4.7 |
Overlap between GTP-related genes changed in different patients
| # 723 | # 266 | # 264 | # 186 | |
| # 723 | 88 | |||
| # 266 | 25 | 54 | ||
| # 264 | 19 | 29 | 67 | |
| # 186 | 28 | 28 | 22 | 71 |
p < .001 for overrepresentation for all overlap except #723 vs #264 p = .02
Figure 3GTP-related genes have large numbers of differentially regulated genes in all patient samples (registry # is outside of each circle). Increasing numbers of patients increases the significance of the ontology group, but produces decreasing numbers of genes changed in all patients. For instance, patient #723 and #266 have 25 GTP-related genes in common; this drops to 14 when overlap with patient #264 is added.