Abstract

Abstract Introduction Cardiac trabeculae form a network of muscular strands that line the inner surfaces of the heart, and their development involves molecular pathways that regulate structural complexity. Excessive or hypertrabeculation occurs as part of normal variation in apparently healthy individuals, as an adaptation to altered loading conditions, and is observed in patients with cardiomyopathies (CMs) and heart failure (HF). Purpose In adults, trabeculation is not a prognostic factor independent of the underlying myocardial disease but may play a role in the natural history of ventricular remodelling. We sought to (i) understand the genetic and non-genetic determinants of trabeculation, (ii) understand its role in the causality of disease, and (iii) evaluate trabeculation as a biomarker for diagnosis and stratification. Methods We report genes with a burden of rare variants and novel common variant associations across the allele frequency spectrum for biventricular trabecular morphology in 47,803 participants of the UK Biobank using fractal dimension analysis of cardiac imaging (Figure 1). We assessed environmental modifiers of trabecular morphology, correlation with cardiac traits, phenome-wide association studies, and the relationship with the progression of CMs and HF. Results We identified a burden of trabeculation-associated rare variants in genes that regulate myocardial contractility and cardiac development and GWAS identified novel loci near genes implicated in CMs, conduction traits, and signalling pathways that define the early development of trabeculation. For example, we identified 56 genes with a burden of rare variants and 68 novel loci from GWAS (e.g., CASQ2, CACNA1C, MYBPC3, MYH7, NKX2-5, NOTCH1, TBX20) for the left ventricle. The strongest imaging relationships with trabeculation were with measures of volume and strain. Modifiers of trabeculation included African ancestry, alcohol intake, and physical activity. Carriers of CM-associated pathogenic variants had increased trabeculation. Of participants with CM reported after imaging, 25% had hypertrabeculation on imaging and hypertrabeculation was a risk factor for a subsequent diagnosis of HF (HR=1.3), mitral valve disorders (HR=1.4), bundle branch block (HR=1.2). Comparisons of biventricular trabeculation showed similarities in trabeculation across the ventricles in CM. Reduced right ventricular trabeculation and end-diastolic volume associated with Type-2 diabetes. Conclusions These data provide new insights into the mechanisms that regulate structural complexity in the heart. Changes in trabeculation may occur early in the pathogenesis of heart disease, can be modified by genes regulating pathways outside the sarcomere, and causality depends on the underlying cardiomyopathic substrate. Trabeculation progresses with cardiovascular disease, is a useful marker of remodelling, and identifies novel genetic modifiers of ventricular complexity.Figure 1

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