Single-nucleus RNA/ATAC-seq in early-stage HCM models predicts SWI/SNF-activation in mutant-myocytes, and allele-specific differences in fibroblasts.
Tilo ThottakaraArun PadmanabhanTalha TanriverdiTharika ThambiduraiJose A Diaz-RgSanika R AmonkarJeffrey E OlginCarlin S LongMaria Roselle AbrahamPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is associated with phenotypic variability. To gain insights into transcriptional regulation of cardiac phenotype, single-nucleus linked RNA-/ATAC-seq was performed in 5-week-old control mouse-hearts (WT) and two HCM-models (R92W-TnT, R403Q-MyHC) that exhibit differences in heart size/function and fibrosis; mutant data was compared to WT. Analysis of 23,304 nuclei from mutant hearts, and 17,669 nuclei from WT, revealed similar dysregulation of gene expression, activation of AP-1 TFs (FOS, JUN) and the SWI/SNF complex in both mutant ventricular-myocytes. In contrast, marked differences were observed between mutants, for gene expression/TF enrichment, in fibroblasts, macrophages, endothelial cells. Cellchat predicted activation of pro-hypertrophic IGF-signaling in both mutant ventricular-myocytes, and profibrotic TGFβ-signaling only in mutant-TnT fibroblasts. In summary, our bioinformatics analyses suggest that activation of IGF-signaling, AP-1 TFs and the SWI/SNF chromatin remodeler complex promotes myocyte hypertrophy in early-stage HCM. Selective activation of TGFβ-signaling in mutant-TnT fibroblasts contributes to genotype-specific differences in cardiac fibrosis.
Keyphrases
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- left ventricular
- gene expression
- wild type
- early stage
- heart failure
- endothelial cells
- transcription factor
- single cell
- genome wide
- extracellular matrix
- dna methylation
- rna seq
- magnetic resonance
- dna damage
- machine learning
- radiation therapy
- atrial fibrillation
- lymph node
- magnetic resonance imaging
- cell proliferation
- oxidative stress
- binding protein
- pi k akt
- signaling pathway
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- nucleic acid
- rectal cancer
- locally advanced
- anti inflammatory
- contrast enhanced
- growth hormone