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Bayesian inference associates rare KDR variants with specific phenotypes in pulmonary arterial hypertension

Authors :
Karyn Megy
William C. Nichols
Chung K. Wendy
Jonathan Stephens
Nicholas W. Morrell
Christopher J. Penkett
Stefan Gräf
Tobias Tilly
Richard C. Trembath
Michael W. Pauciulo
Divya Pandya
Carrie L. Welch
Carmen M. Treacy
Allan Lawrie
Smitha Rajaram
Martin R. Wilkins
Yufeng Shen
Emilia M. Swietlik
Andrew J. Swift
Laura Southgate
Marcella Cogliano
Na Zhu
Heritable Pah
Katie A. Lutz
Daniel Greene
US Pah Biobank Enrolling Centers' Investigators
Jennifer M. Martin
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2019.

Abstract

BackgroundApproximately 25% of patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) have been found to harbor rare mutations in disease-causing genes. To identify missing heritability in PAH we integrated deep phenotyping with whole-genome sequencing data using Bayesian statistics.MethodsWe analyzed 13,037 participants enrolled in the NIHR BioResource - Rare Diseases (NBR) study, of which 1,148 were recruited to the PAH domain. To test for genetic associations between genes and selected phenotypes of pulmonary hypertension (PH), we used the Bayesian rare-variant association method BeviMed.ResultsHeterozygous, high impact, likely loss-of-function variants in the Kinase Insert Domain Receptor (KDR) gene were strongly associated with significantly reduced transfer coefficient for carbon monoxide (KCO, posterior probability (PP)=0.989) and older age at diagnosis (PP=0.912). We also provide evidence for familial segregation of a rare nonsense KDR variant with these phenotypes. On computed tomographic imaging of the lungs, a range of parenchymal abnormalities were observed in the five patients harboring these predicted deleterious variants in KDR. Four additional PAH cases with rare likely loss-of-function variants in KDR were independently identified in the US PAH Biobank cohort with similar phenotypic characteristics.ConclusionsThe Bayesian inference approach allowed us to independently validate KDR, which encodes for the Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor 2 (VEGFR2), as a novel PAH candidate gene. Furthermore, this approach specifically associated high impact likely loss-of-function variants in the genetically constrained gene with distinct phenotypes. These findings provide evidence for KDR being a clinically actionable PAH gene and further support the central role of the vascular endothelium in the pathobiology of PAH.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........aefc2b08f58f6acceecbdbdf86411295