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Physiol. Genomics (August 1, 2006). doi:10.1152/physiolgenomics.00318.2005
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Submitted on December 21, 2005
Accepted on July 26, 2006

Transcriptional alterations in the left ventricle of three hypertensive rats models

Catherine Cerutti1*, Mazen Kurdi1, Giampiero Bricca1, Wassim Hodroj1, Christian Paultre1, Jacques Randon1, and Marie-Paule Gustin1

1 EA 3740, University Cl. Bernard Lyon I, Lyon, France

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: cerutti{at}univ-lyon1.fr.

Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) is commonly associated with hypertension and represents an independent cardiovascular risk factor. The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that the cardiac overload related to hypertension is associated to a specific gene expression pattern independently of genetic background. Gene expression levels were obtained with microarrays for 15,866 transcripts from RNA of left ventricles from 12-week-old rats of three hypertensive models (spontaneously hypertensive rat (SHR), Lyon hypertensive rat (LH), and heterozygous TGR(mRen2)27 rat), and their respective controls. More than 60% of the detected transcripts displayed significant changes between the three groups of normotensive rats, showing large interstrain variability. Expression data were analyzed with respect to hypertension, LVH, and chromosomal distribution. Only four genes had significantly modified expression in the three hypertensive models among which a single gene, coding for sialyltransferase 7A, was consistently overexpressed. Correlation analysis between expression data and left ventricular mass index (LVMI) over all rats identified a larger set of genes whose expression was continuously related with LVMI including known genes associated with cardiac remodeling. Positioning the detected transcripts along the chromosomes pointed out high density regions mostly located within blood pressure and cardiac mass quantitative trait loci. Although our study could not detect a unique reprogramming of cardiac cells involving specific genes at early stage of LVH, it allowed the identification of some genes associated with LVH regardless of genetic background. This study provides thus a set of potentially important genes contained within restricted chromosomal regions involved in cardiovascular diseases.




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M.-P. Gustin, C. Z. Paultre, J. Randon, G. Bricca, and C. Cerutti
Functional meta-analysis of double connectivity in gene coexpression networks in mammals
Physiol Genomics, June 10, 2008; 34(1): 34 - 41.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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