Persistent atrial fibrillation was associated with differential expression of 35 genes compared to patients without a history of atrial fibrillation (FDR <0.05).
Cross-Sectional (n=195)
Yes
Does the presence of atrial fibrillation alter atrial gene expression in patients with and without heart failure?
Persistent atrial fibrillation is associated with significant changes in the expression of genes related to structural remodeling, inflammation, and cellular respiration, regardless of concomitant heart failure.
p-value: p=<0.05
BACKGROUND: Little is known about genome-wide changes in the atrial transcriptome as a cause or consequence of atrial fibrillation (AF), and the effect of its common and clinically relevant comorbidity-heart failure (HF). OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to explore candidate disease processes for AF by investigating gene expression changes in atrial tissue samples from patients with and without AF, stratified by HF. METHODS: RNA sequencing was performed in right and left atrial appendage tissue in 195 patients undergoing open heart surgery from centers participating in the CATCH-ME consortium (no history of AF, n = 91; paroxysmal AF, n = 53; persistent/permanent AF, n = 51). Analyses were stratified into patients with/without HF (n = 75/120) and adjusted for age, sex, atrial side, and a combination of clinical characteristics. RESULTS: We identified 35 genes associated with persistent AF compared to patients without a history of AF, both in the presence or absence of HF (false discovery rate <0.05). These were mostly novel associations, including 13 long noncoding RNAs. Genes were involved in regulation of cardiomyocyte structure, conduction properties, fibrosis, inflammation, and endothelial dysfunction. Gene set enrichment analysis identified mainly inflammatory gene sets to be enriched in AF patients without HF, and gene sets involved in cellular respiration in AF patients with HF. CONCLUSION: Analysis of atrial gene expression profiles identified numerous novel genes associated with persistent AF, in the presence or absence of HF. Interestingly, no consistent transcriptional changes were associated with paroxysmal AF, suggesting that AF-induced changes in gene expression predominate other changes.
Zeemering et al. (Mon,) conducted a cross-sectional in Atrial fibrillation (n=195). Persistent atrial fibrillation vs. No history of atrial fibrillation was evaluated on Differential gene expression in atrial tissue (p=<0.05). Persistent atrial fibrillation was associated with differential expression of 35 genes compared to patients without a history of atrial fibrillation (FDR <0.05).