Identifying and replicating plasma proteins associated with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy severity in carriers of pathogenic MYBPC3 variants
Hassanzada, F.; van Vugt, M.; Jansen, M.; Baas, A.; te Riele, A. S.; Dooijes, D.; van der Crabben, S. N.; Jongbloed, J. D.; Cox, M. G.; Amin, A. S.; Lekanne Deprez, R. H.; Ruijsink, B.; Kuster, D. W.; van der Velden, J.; Bezzina, C. R.; Asselbergs, F. W.; van Tintelen, J. P.; van Spaendonck-Zwarts, K. Y.; Schmidt, A. F.
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Background. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a clinically variable disease in terms of onset and progression. Pathogenic MYBPC3 variants account for a substantial proportion of HCM diagnoses. This study sought to identify protein biomarkers associated with HCM severity. Methods. Olink-assayed plasma proteins of 144 MYBPC3 pathogenic variant carriers were tested for associations with HCM severity based on HCM diagnostic criteria (unaffected, mildly, or severely affected). The UK Biobank was used to replicate the identified proteins through considering time to onset of HCM (67 cases), cardiomyopathy (156 cases),and associations with cardiac MRI derived left ventricular maximum wall thickness (6,492 participants). Replicated proteins were further prioritised based on cardiac tissue expression and druggability, and annotated using pathway enrichment and association with onset of: heart failure (HF), dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), sudden cardiac arrest (SCA), and ventricular arrhythmias (VA). Results. Among pathogenic MYBPC3 variant carriers, we identified 27 proteins associated with HCM severity. We independently replicated 21 proteins in the UK Biobank. Of the five prioritised proteins (NT-proBNP, GDF-15, FGF-23, ADM, and NCAM1), all but NT-proBNP were targeted by drugs with repurposing potential. The replicated proteins additionally associated with the incidence of HF (n=5), DCM (n=4), SCA (n=4), and VA (n=4). Conclusion. This study replicated 21 and prioritised five proteins associated with HCM severity in pathogenic MYBPC3 variant carriers. Replication in unselected HCM suggests the prioritised proteins are associated with HCM independent of genotype, providing important leads for plasma-based markers for diagnoses, disease monitoring, and drug targets.
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