Meta-Analysis of Dilated Cardiomyopathy Using Cardiac RNA-Seq Transcriptomic Datasets Article (Faculty180)

cited authors

  • Alimadadi, Ahmad; Munroe, Patricia B; Joe, Bina; Cheng, Xi

description

  • Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is one of the most common causes of heart failure. Several studies have used RNA-sequencing (RNA-seq) to profile differentially expressed genes (DEGs) associated with DCM. In this study, we aimed to profile gene expression signatures and identify novel genes associated with DCM through a quantitative meta-analysis of three publicly available RNA-seq studies using human left ventricle tissues from 41 DCM cases and 21 control samples. Our meta-analysis identified 789 DEGs including 581 downregulated and 208 upregulated genes. Several DCM-related genes previously reported, including , , and , were among the top 50 DEGs. Our meta-analysis also identified 39 new DEGs that were not detected using those individual RNA-seq datasets. Some of those genes, including , and , confirmed previous reports of associations with cardiovascular functions. Using DEGs from this meta-analysis, the Ingenuity Pathway Analysis (IPA) identified five activated toxicity pathways, including failure of heart as the most significant pathway. Among the upstream regulators, was downregulated and prioritized by IPA as the top affected upstream regulator for several DCM-related genes. To our knowledge, this study is the first to perform a transcriptomic meta-analysis for clinical DCM using RNA-seq datasets. Overall, our meta-analysis successfully identified a core set of genes associated with DCM.

publication date

  • 2020

published in

volume

  • 11