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Quantitative trait loci modifying cardiac atrial septal morphology and risk of patent foramen ovale in the mouse

Authors :
Michael F. Buckley
Donna Lai
Changbaig Hyun
Edwin P. Kirk
Peter C. Thomson
Richard P. Harvey
I. C. A. Martin
M. Leticia Castro
Christine Biben
Chris Moran
Source :
Circulation research. 98(5)
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

Atrial septal defect (ASD) is a common congenital heart disease (CHD) occurring in 5 to 7 per 10 000 live births. Mutations in 5 human genes ( NKX2.5 , TBX5 , GATA4 , MYHC , ACTC ) are known to cause dominant ASD, but these account for a minority of cases. Human and mouse data suggest that ASD exists in an anatomical continuum with milder septal variants patent foramen ovale (PFO) and atrial septal aneurysm, strongly associated with ischemic stroke and migraine. We have previously shown in inbred mice that the incidence of PFO strongly correlates with length of the interatrial septum primum , defining a quantitative trait underlying PFO risk. To better understand genetic causation of atrial septal abnormalities, we mapped quantitative trait loci (QTL) influencing septal morphology using mouse strains (QSi5 and 129T2/SvEms) maximally informative for PFO incidence and 3 quantitative septal anatomical traits including septum primum length. [QSi5×129T2/SvEms]F2 intercross animals (n=1437) were phenotyped and a whole genome scan performed at an average 17-cM interval. Statistical methodology scoring PFO as a binary phenotype was developed as a confirmatory mapping technique. We mapped 7 significant and 6 suggestive QTL modifying quantitative phenotypes, with 4 supported by binary analysis. Quantitative traits, although strongly associated with PFO ( P

Details

ISSN :
15244571
Volume :
98
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4dd7818ac4daf46d8931d4a8945f7b24