| Literature DB >> 33645542 |
Najim Lahrouchi1, Alex V Postma2,3, Christian M Salazar4, Daniel M De Laughter5, Fleur Tjong1, Lenka Piherová6, Forrest Z Bowling7, Dominic Zimmerman1, Elisabeth M Lodder1, Asaf Ta-Shma8, Zeev Perles8, Leander Beekman1, Aho Ilgun3, Quinn Gunst3, Mariam Hababa1, Doris Škorić-Milosavljević1, Viktor Stránecký6, Viktor Tomek9, Peter de Knijff10, Rick de Leeuw10, Jamille Y Robinson11, Sabrina C Burn12, Hiba Mustafa12, Matthew Ambrose13, Timothy Moss14, Jennifer Jacober15, Dmitriy M Niyazov15, Barry Wolf16,17, Katherine H Kim16,17, Sara Cherny17,18, Andreas Rousounides19, Aphrodite Aristidou-Kallika20, George Tanteles21,22, Bruel Ange-Line23,24, Anne-Sophie Denommé-Pichon23,24, Christine Francannet25, Damara Ortiz26, Monique C Haak27, Arend D.J. Ten Harkel28, Gwendolyn Tr Manten27, Annemiek C Dutman29, Katelijne Bouman30, Monia Magliozzi31, Francesca Clementina Radio31, Gijs We Santen32, Johanna C Herkert30, H Alex Brown11, Orly Elpeleg33, Maurice Jb van den Hoff3, Barbara Mulder1, Michael V Airola7, Stanislav Kmoch6, Joey V Barnett11, Sally-Ann Clur34, Michael A Frohman4, Connie R Bezzina1.
Abstract
Congenital heart disease is the most common type of birth defect, accounting for one-third of all congenital anomalies. Using whole-exome sequencing of 2718 patients with congenital heart disease and a search in GeneMatcher, we identified 30 patients from 21 unrelated families of different ancestries with biallelic phospholipase D1 (PLD1) variants who presented predominantly with congenital cardiac valve defects. We also associated recessive PLD1 variants with isolated neonatal cardiomyopathy. Furthermore, we established that p.I668F is a founder variant among Ashkenazi Jews (allele frequency of ~2%) and describe the phenotypic spectrum of PLD1-associated congenital heart defects. PLD1 missense variants were overrepresented in regions of the protein critical for catalytic activity, and, correspondingly, we observed a strong reduction in enzymatic activity for most of the mutant proteins in an enzymatic assay. Finally, we demonstrate that PLD1 inhibition decreased endothelial-mesenchymal transition, an established pivotal early step in valvulogenesis. In conclusion, our study provides a more detailed understanding of disease mechanisms and phenotypic expression associated with PLD1 loss of function.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiology; Cardiovascular disease; Genetic diseases; Genetics; Heart failure
Year: 2021 PMID: 33645542 PMCID: PMC7919725 DOI: 10.1172/JCI142148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808