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A Nonsynonymous Polymorphism in Semaphorin 3A as a Risk Factor for Human Unexplained Cardiac Arrest with Documented Ventricular Fibrillation

Authors :
Nakano, Yukiko
Chayama, Kazuaki
Ochi, Hidenori
Toshishige, Masaaki
Hayashida, Yasufumi
Miki, Daiki
Hayes, C. Nelson
Suzuki, Hidekazu
Tokuyama, Takehito
Oda, Noboru
Suenari, Kazuyoshi
Uchimura-Makita, Yuko
Kajihara, Kenta
Sairaku, Akinori
Motoda, Chikaaki
Fujiwara, Mai
Watanabe, Yoshikazu
Yoshida, Yukihiko
Ohkubo, Kimie
Watanabe, Ichiro
Nogami, Akihiko
Hasegawa, Kanae
Watanabe, Hiroshi
Endo, Naoto
Aiba, Takeshi
Shimizu, Wataru
Ohno, Seiko
Horie, Minoru
Arihiro, Koji
Tashiro, Satoshi
Makita, Naomasa
Kihara, Yasuki
Nakano, Yukiko
Chayama, Kazuaki
Ochi, Hidenori
Toshishige, Masaaki
Hayashida, Yasufumi
Miki, Daiki
Hayes, C. Nelson
Suzuki, Hidekazu
Tokuyama, Takehito
Oda, Noboru
Suenari, Kazuyoshi
Uchimura-Makita, Yuko
Kajihara, Kenta
Sairaku, Akinori
Motoda, Chikaaki
Fujiwara, Mai
Watanabe, Yoshikazu
Yoshida, Yukihiko
Ohkubo, Kimie
Watanabe, Ichiro
Nogami, Akihiko
Hasegawa, Kanae
Watanabe, Hiroshi
Endo, Naoto
Aiba, Takeshi
Shimizu, Wataru
Ohno, Seiko
Horie, Minoru
Arihiro, Koji
Tashiro, Satoshi
Makita, Naomasa
Kihara, Yasuki
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Unexplained cardiac arrest (UCA) with documented ventricular fibrillation (VF) is a major cause of sudden cardiac death. Abnormal sympathetic innervations have been shown to be a trigger of ventricular fibrillation. Further, adequate expression of SEMA3A was reported to be critical for normal patterning of cardiac sympathetic innervation. We investigated the relevance of the semaphorin 3A (SEMA3A) gene located at chromosome 5 in the etiology of UCA. Eighty-three Japanese patients diagnosed with UCA and 2,958 healthy controls from two different geographic regions in Japan were enrolled. A nonsynonymous polymorphism (I334V, rs138694505A>G) in exon 10 of the SEMA3A gene identified through resequencing was significantly associated with UCA (combined P = 0.0004, OR 3.08, 95%CI 1.67-5.7). Overall, 15.7% of UCA patients carried the risk genotype G, whereas only 5.6% did in controls. In patients with SEMA3AI334V, VF predominantly occurred at rest during the night. They showed sinus bradycardia, and their RR intervals on the 12-lead electrocardiography tended to be longer than those in patients without SEMA3AI334V (1031±111 ms versus 932±182 ms, P = 0.039). Immunofluorescence staining of cardiac biopsy specimens revealed that sympathetic nerves, which are absent in the subendocardial layer in normal hearts, extended to the subendocardial layer only in patients with SEMA3AI334V. Functional analyses revealed that the axon-repelling and axon-collapsing activities of mutant SEMA3AI334V genes were significantly weaker than those of wild-type SEMA3A genes. A high incidence of SEMA3AI334V in UCA patients and inappropriate innervation patterning in their hearts implicate involvement of the SEMA3A gene in the pathogenesis of UCA.<br />identifier:PLoS Genetics, 9(4), Article numbere 1003364; 2013

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1375205757
Document Type :
Electronic Resource