1. Large-scale single-nuclei profiling identifies role for ATRNL1 in atrial fibrillation.
- Author
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Hill, Matthew C., Simonson, Bridget, Roselli, Carolina, Xiao, Ling, Herndon, Caroline N., Chaffin, Mark, Mantineo, Helene, Atwa, Ondine, Bhasin, Harshit, Guedira, Yasmine, Bedi Jr., Kenneth C., Margulies, Kenneth B., Klattenhoff, Carla A., Tucker, Nathan R., and Ellinor, Patrick T.
- Subjects
ACTION potentials ,GENE expression ,LEFT heart atrium ,GENETIC overexpression ,RNA sequencing ,ARRHYTHMIA - Abstract
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common sustained arrhythmia in humans, yet the molecular basis of AF remains incompletely understood. To determine the cell type-specific transcriptional changes underlying AF, we perform single-nucleus RNA-seq (snRNA-seq) on left atrial (LA) samples from patients with AF and controls. From more than 175,000 nuclei we find that only cardiomyocytes (CMs) and macrophages (MΦs) have a significant number of differentially expressed genes in patients with AF. Attractin Like 1 (ATRNL1) was overexpressed in CMs among patients with AF and localized to the intercalated disks. Further, in both knockdown and overexpression experiments we identify a potent role for ATRNL1 in cell stress response, and in the modulation of the cardiac action potential. Finally, we detect an unexpected expression pattern for a leading AF candidate gene, KCNN3. In sum, we uncover a role for ATRNL1 which may serve as potential therapeutic target for this common arrhythmia. Characterizing atrial fibrillation (AF) at the single cell level is challenging. Here, the authors perform snRNA-seq on 18 patients with AF to investigate the cell composition, and gene expression shifts associated with this common arrhythmia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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