Abstract

Dilated cardiomyopathy is a prevalent and often fatal disease in humans and dogs. Indeed dilated cardiomyopathy is the third most common form of cardiac disease in humans, reported to affect approximately 36 individuals per 100,000 individuals. In dogs, dilated cardiomyopathy is the second most common cardiac disease and is most prevalent in the Irish Wolfhound, Doberman Pinscher and Newfoundland breeds. Dilated cardiomyopathy is characterised by ventricular chamber enlargement and systolic dysfunction which often leads to congestive heart failure. Although multiple human loci have been implicated in the pathogenesis of dilated cardiomyopathy, the identified variants are typically associated with rare monogenic forms of dilated cardiomyopathy. The potential for multigenic interactions contributing to human dilated cardiomyopathy remains poorly understood. Consistent with this, several known human dilated cardiomyopathy loci have been excluded as common causes of canine dilated cardiomyopathy, although canine dilated cardiomyopathy resembles the human disease functionally. This suggests additional genetic factors contribute to the dilated cardiomyopathy phenotype.This study represents a meta-analysis of available canine dilated cardiomyopathy genetic datasets with the goal of determining potential multigenic interactions relating the sex chromosome genotype (XX vs. XY) with known dilated cardiomyopathy associated loci on chromosome 5 and the PDK4 gene in the incidence and progression of dilated cardiomyopathy. The results show an interaction between known canine dilated cardiomyopathy loci and an unknown X-linked locus. Our study is the first to test a multigenic contribution to dilated cardiomyopathy and suggest a genetic basis for the known sex-disparity in dilated cardiomyopathy outcomes.

Highlights

  • Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a prevalent and often fatal disease requiring clinical management in humans and dogs (Egenvall, Bonnett & Haggstrom, 2006; Hershberger, Morales & Siegfried, 2010)

  • In human DCM genetic testing where a panel of approximately 50 loci are tested concurrently, often more than one locus can be implicated in the disease (McNally, Golbus & Puckelwartz, 2013), suggesting multiple genetic factors cooperate in DCM aetiology

  • Our models do not explain all cases of canine DCM, by combining three factors (PDK4, Chr5 TIGRP2P73097 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) and an X-linked locus) we show that DCM incidence can be more accurately predicted (Tables 6–12)

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Summary

Introduction

Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) is a prevalent and often fatal disease requiring clinical management in humans and dogs (Egenvall, Bonnett & Haggstrom, 2006; Hershberger, Morales & Siegfried, 2010). Myocardial ischemia, hypertension, toxins, infections and metabolic defects have been implicated (McNally, Golbus & Puckelwartz, 2013). In human DCM genetic testing where a panel of approximately 50 loci are tested concurrently, often more than one locus can be implicated in the disease (McNally, Golbus & Puckelwartz, 2013), suggesting multiple genetic factors cooperate in DCM aetiology

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