Abstract

The genetic reference population of recombinant inbred BXD mice has been derived from crosses between C57BL/6J and DBA/2J strains. The DBA/2J parent exhibits cardiomyopathy phenotypes, whereas C57BL/6J has normal heart. BXD mice are sequenced for studying genetic interactions in cardiomyopathies. The study aimed to assess cardiomyopathy traits in BXDs and investigate the quantitative genetic architecture of those traits. Echocardiography, blood pressure, and cardiomyocyte size parameters obtained from 44 strains of BXD family (n > 5/sex) at 4-5 mo of age were associated with heart transcriptomes and expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) mapping was performed. More than twofold variance in ejection fraction (EF%), fractional shortening (FS%), left ventricular volumes (LVVols), internal dimensions (LVIDs), mass (LVM), and posterior wall (LVPW) thickness was found among BXDs. In male BXDs, eQTL mapping identified Ndrg4 on chromosome 8 QTL to be positively correlated with LVVol and LVID and negatively associated with cardiomyocyte diameter. In female BXDs, significant QTLs were found on chromosomes 7 and 3 to be associated with LVPW and EF% and FS%, respectively, and Josd2, Dap3, and Tpm3 were predicted as strong candidate genes. Our study found variable cardiovascular traits among BXD strains and identified multiple associated QTLs, suggesting an influence of genetic background on expression of echocardiographic and cardiomyocyte diameter traits. Increased LVVol and reduced EF% and FS% represented dilated cardiomyopathy, whereas increased LV mass and wall thickness indicated hypertrophic cardiomyopathy traits. The BXD family is ideal for identifying candidate genes, causal and modifier, that influence cardiovascular phenotypes.NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study aimed to establish a cardiac phenotype-genotype correlation in murine genetic reference population of BXD RI strains by phenotyping the echocardiography, blood pressure, and cardiomyocyte diameter traits and associating each collected phenotype with genetic background. Our study identified several QTLs and candidate genes that have significant association with cardiac hypertrophy, ventricular dilation, and function including systolic hyperfunction and dysfunction.

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