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Exome sequencing implicates ancestry-related Mendelian variation at SYNE1 in childhood-onset essential hypertension.

Authors :
Copeland I
Wonkam-Tingang E
Gupta-Malhotra M
Hashmi SS
Han Y
Jajoo A
Hall NJ
Hernandez PP
Lie N
Liu D
Xu J
Rosenfeld J
Haldipur A
Desire Z
Coban-Akdemir ZH
Scott DA
Li Q
Chao HT
Zaske AM
Lupski JR
Milewicz DM
Shete S
Posey JE
Hanchard NA
Source :
JCI insight [JCI Insight] 2024 May 08; Vol. 9 (9). Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 May 08.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Childhood-onset essential hypertension (COEH) is an uncommon form of hypertension that manifests in childhood or adolescence and, in the United States, disproportionately affects children of African ancestry. The etiology of COEH is unknown, but its childhood onset, low prevalence, high heritability, and skewed ancestral demography suggest the potential to identify rare genetic variation segregating in a Mendelian manner among affected individuals and thereby implicate genes important to disease pathogenesis. However, no COEH genes have been reported to date. Here, we identify recessive segregation of rare and putatively damaging missense variation in the spectrin domain of spectrin repeat containing nuclear envelope protein 1 (SYNE1), a cardiovascular candidate gene, in 3 of 16 families with early-onset COEH without an antecedent family history. By leveraging exome sequence data from an additional 48 COEH families, 1,700 in-house trios, and publicly available data sets, we demonstrate that compound heterozygous SYNE1 variation in these COEH individuals occurred more often than expected by chance and that this class of biallelic rare variation was significantly enriched among individuals of African genetic ancestry. Using in vitro shRNA knockdown of SYNE1, we show that reduced SYNE1 expression resulted in a substantial decrease in the elasticity of smooth muscle vascular cells that could be rescued by pharmacological inhibition of the downstream RhoA/Rho-associated protein kinase pathway. These results provide insights into the molecular genetics and underlying pathophysiology of COEH and suggest a role for precision therapeutics in the future.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2379-3708
Volume :
9
Issue :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
JCI insight
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38716726
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.172152