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ROBO4 variants predispose individuals to bicuspid aortic valve and thoracic aortic aneurysm.

Russell A GouldHamza AzizCourtney E WoodsManuel Alejandro Seman-SenderosElizabeth SparksChristoph PreussFlorian WünnemannDjahida BedjaCassandra R MoatsSarah A McClymontRebecca RoseNara SobreiraHua LingGretchen MacCarrickAjay Anand KumarIlse LuyckxElyssa CannaertsAline VerstraetenHanna M BjörkAnn-Cathrin LehsauVinod Jaskula-RangaHenrik LauridsenAsad A ShahChristopher L BennettPatrick T EllinorHonghuang LinEric M IsselbacherChristian L Lino CardenasJonathan T ButcherG Chad HughesMark E Lindsaynull nullnull nullLuc MertensAnders Franco-CerecedaJudith M A VerhagenMarja WesselsSalah A MohamedPer ErikssonSeema MitalLut Van LaerBart L LoeysGregor U AndelfingerAndrew S McCallionHarry C Dietz
Published in: Nature genetics (2018)
Bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) is a common congenital heart defect (population incidence, 1-2%)1-3 that frequently presents with ascending aortic aneurysm (AscAA)4. BAV/AscAA shows autosomal dominant inheritance with incomplete penetrance and male predominance. Causative gene mutations (for example, NOTCH1, SMAD6) are known for ≤1% of nonsyndromic BAV cases with and without AscAA5-8, impeding mechanistic insight and development of therapeutic strategies. Here, we report the identification of variants in ROBO4 (which encodes a factor known to contribute to endothelial performance) that segregate with disease in two families. Targeted sequencing of ROBO4 showed enrichment for rare variants in BAV/AscAA probands compared with controls. Targeted silencing of ROBO4 or mutant ROBO4 expression in endothelial cell lines results in impaired barrier function and a synthetic repertoire suggestive of endothelial-to-mesenchymal transition. This is consistent with BAV/AscAA-associated findings in patients and in animal models deficient for ROBO4. These data identify a novel endothelial etiology for this common human disease phenotype.
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