Abstract

Introduction: Bicuspid Aortic Valve (BAV), the most common adult congenital heart defect, is a major cause of aortic insufficiency or stenosis requiring valve replacement and thoracic aortic aneurysms predisposing to acute aortic dissections. The spectrum of BAV ranges from early onset valve and aortic complications to sporadic late onset disease. We determined the frequency and gene content of rare genomic copy number variants (CNVs) in isolated BAV cases. Methods: We performed genome-wide SNP microarray analysis of familial BAV cases with early onset complications in the UTHealth BAV Research Registry (EBAV, n=394) and elderly probands from the International BAV Consortium (BAVCON, n=4216). CNVs were detected in Illumina genotypes using the PennCNV, QuantiSNP and cnvPartition algorithms. BAV cases were compared to 16,576 controls without known cardiovascular disease from the Database of Genotypes and Phenotypes. Only CNV calls with >6 consecutive variants, >20 kb in length, identified by at least two algorithms and intersected with known genes were included. For comparison, we assessed a cohort with left ventricular outflow tract obstructive lesions including BAV (LVOTO, n=1561) using identical methods. CNV burden and associations were tested using PLINK. Results: We identified 84 large recurrent CNVs in BAV cases that are absent or rare (<0.1%) in controls. 34 rare CNVs overlap between BAV and LVOTO cases and involve candidate genes that interact with each other during heart development. The largest and most prevalent of the recurrent CNVs are 8p23 duplications involving GATA4 (OR 340, CI: 42-2700). CNVs of genes that cause BAV when mutated were significantly enriched in cases (n=135, P =1x10 -27 ). The overall burden of rare genic CNVs, specifically large deletions, was also increased in BAV cases (empiric P < 1x10 -5 ) and was higher in younger EBAV cases than in older BAVCON cases. Conclusion: We identified likely pathogenic CNVs in more than 10% of BAV cases, implicating alterations of candidate genes at these loci in the pathogenesis of BAV.

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