| Literature DB >> 34279740 |
Nagendra Boopathy Senguttuvan1, Vinodhini Subramanian2, Vettriselvi Venkatesan3, T R Muralidharan4, Kavitha Sankaranarayanan5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the leading cause of mortality in India. Residual risk exists in patients receiving optimal guideline-directed medical therapy. Possession of certain somatic mutations, at a variant allele frequency of ≥ 2% in peripheral blood, driving clonal expansion in the absence of cytopenias and dysplastic hematopoiesis is defined as clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP). Recently, it was found that carriers of CHIP had a higher risk to have coronary artery disease (CAD) and early-onset myocardial infarction. Association of CHIP with heart failure and valvular heart diseases is increasingly being considered. The common link that connects CHIP mutations and CVDs is inflammation leading to increased expression of cytokines and chemokines. We intended to do a systematic review about the association of CHIP mutations and CVD along with identifying specific CHIP mutations involved in increasing the risk of having CVDs. We performed an extensive literature search in PubMed and Google Scholar databases. Out of 302 articles, we narrowed it down to 10 studies based on our pre-specified criteria. The methodology adopted for the identification of CHIP mutations in the selected studies included - whole-exome sequencing (n = 3), whole-genome analysis (n = 1), transcriptome profiling analysis (n = 1), whole-genome analysis (n = 1), and single-cell RNA-sequencing (n = 1). We found that the available literature suggested an association between CHIP and CVD. The most commonly described CHIP mutations in patients with CVD are DNMT3A, TET2, ASXL1, TP53, JAK2, and SF3B. We further analyzed the commonly mutated CHIP genes using bioinformatics tools. Protein function and interaction analysis were performed using the g: Profiler and GeneMANIA online tools. The results revealed significant bio grid interactions for molecular functions, biological processes, and biological pathways. Interaction analysis showed significant physical and co-expression interactions. SHORTEntities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular diseases; Clonal hematopoiesis of indeterminate potential (CHIP); Mutations; Myocardial infarction
Year: 2021 PMID: 34279740 PMCID: PMC8287286 DOI: 10.1186/s43141-021-00205-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Genet Eng Biotechnol ISSN: 1687-157X
Search strategy performed
| Database | Search query | |
|---|---|---|
| PubMed | #1 | (CLONAL HEMATOPOIESIS OF INDETERMINATE POTENTIAL) |
| #2 | ((((((((CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES) OR (CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE)) OR (ATHEROSCLEROSIS)) OR (STROKE)) OR (HEART FAILURE)) OR (MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION)) OR (AORTIC STENOSIS)) OR (PREMATURE AGING)) | |
| #3 | #1 AND #2 | |
| Google Scholar | Clonal Hematopoiesis Of Indeterminate Potential; Cardiovascular Diseases; OR Coronary Artery Disease; OR Atherosclerosis; OR Stroke; OR Heart Failure; OR Myocardial Infarction; OR Aortic Stenosis; OR Premature Aging | |
Fig. 1PRISMA flow chart
Descriptive data of original articles reviewed
| Year | Authors | Sample size | Study design | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 | Wesley Tyler Abplanalp et al. [ | 10 | Cohort | • Presence of DNMT3A mutation in the monocytes of heart failure patients has increased the expression of inflammatory genes which might aid the provoke the occurrence of chronic heart failure. |
| 2021 | Michael C. Honigberg et al. [ | 19,606 | Cohort | • Association between natural premature menopause and CHIP = • DNMT3A mutation was observed to be significantly associated with premature menopause • Natural premature menopause might be considered as a risk signal for developing CHIP or CHIP-associated CVD |
| 2021 | Domingo A. Pascual-Figal et al. [ | 62 | Cohort | • Presence of DNMT3A or TET2 mutations might accelerate HF progression in terms of death ( |
| 2020 | Alexander G. Bick et al. [ | 97,691 | Cohort | • > 75% of CHIP mutations in DNMT3A, TET2, and ASXL1. • 15% of CHIP mutations were in PPM1D, JAK2, SF3B1, SRSF2, and TP53 |
| 2020 | Alexander G. Bick et al. [ | 35,416 | Cohort | • CHIP associated with increased CVD event risk ( • Presence of large CHIP mutations adjusted for hSCRP value showed increase in CVD event risk ( • Presence of rs1880241 shows reduced CVD events in large CHIP carriers ( • IL6R p.Asp358Ala allele reduces CVD event risk in individuals ( |
| 2020 | Wesley Tyler Abplanalp et al. [ | 17 | Case-control | • Patients with DNMT3A or TET2 CHIP mutations can be categorized for high risk for adverse outcomes of COVID-19 • SARS-CoV-2 patients could be tested for the presence of DNMT3A or TET2 CHIP-driver sequence variations to provide personalized treatment strategies such as IL-6 or IL-6R antagonists to mitigate CRS |
| 2020 | Lambert Busque et al. [ | 1887 | Case-control | • hs-CRP was significantly higher in CHIP carriers ( • DNMT3A CHIP mutation carriers had higher hs-CRP ( |
| 2020 | Sebastian Cremer et al.25 | 419 | Cohort | Patients with two or more CHIP mutations have increased mortality risk ( |
| 2019 | Lena Dorsheimer et al. [ | 200 CHF | Cohort | • DNMT3A ( 7% of patients); TET2 (4.5% of patients), KDM6A (2 % of patients), BCOR (1.5 % of patients) • Significantly worse long-term clinical outcome observed in patients with DNMT3A/TET2mutations |
| 2017 | S. Jaiswal et al. [ | 8255 | Case-control study | The presence of CHIP mutation nearly doubled the risk of coronary heart disease in humans and mice with accelerated atherosclerosis. |
Significantly enriched BioGRID interactions of most commonly mutated genes indicating the molecular function, biological process, cellular component, and biological pathways
| Description | Term ID | Corrected |
|---|---|---|
| Covalent chromatin modification | GO:0016569 | 8.13797E−05 |
| Chromatin organization | GO:0006325 | 0.001237802 |
| Bone marrow development | GO:0048539 | 0.002607555 |
| Histone modification | GO:0016570 | 0.006671044 |
| Chromosome organization | GO:0051276 | 0.009673322 |
| Histone kinase activity (H3-Y41 specific) | GO:0035401 | 0.049878314 |
| Histone tyrosine kinase activity | GO:0035400 | 0.049878314 |
| Euchromatin | GO:0000791 | 0.009699567 |
| U11/U12 snRNP | GO:0034693 | 0.049903619 |
| Epigenetic regulation of gene expression | REAC:R-HSA-212165 | 0.010116540 |
| Amine ligand-binding receptors | REAC:R-HSA-375280 | 0.008152302 |
| Lymph node; non-germinal center cells [high] | HPA:0310443 | 0.033971887 |
| Abnormal cellular immune system morphology | HP:0010987 | 0.002011691 |
| Abnormal leukocyte morphology | HP:0001881 | 0.002011691 |
| Chest pain | HP:0100749 | 0.00232273 |
| Abnormal platelet morphology | HP:0011875 | 0.002471705 |
| Abnormal immune system morphology | HP:0032251 | 0.00256098 |
| Abdominal pain | HP:0002027 | 0.002830113 |
| Arterial thrombosis | HP:0004420 | 0.003992637 |
| Weight loss | HP:0001824 | 0.00406694 |
| Abnormal number of granulocyte precursors | HP:0012137 | 0.004170906 |
| Megaloblastic erythroid hyperplasia | HP:0200143 | 0.004170906 |
Fig. 2Network analysis of the DNMT3A, TET2, ASXL1, TP53, JAK2, and SF3B1 genes using GeneMania