Clinical-transcriptional prioritization of the circulating proteome in human heart failure

Cell Rep Med. 2024 Sep 17;5(9):101704. doi: 10.1016/j.xcrm.2024.101704. Epub 2024 Sep 2.

Abstract

Given expanding studies in epidemiology and disease-oriented human studies offering hundreds of associations between the human "ome" and disease, prioritizing molecules relevant to disease mechanisms among this growing breadth is important. Here, we link the circulating proteome to human heart failure (HF) propensity (via echocardiographic phenotyping and clinical outcomes) across the lifespan, demonstrating key pathways of fibrosis, inflammation, metabolism, and hypertrophy. We observe a broad array of genes encoding proteins linked to HF phenotypes and outcomes in clinical populations dynamically expressed at a transcriptional level in human myocardium during HF and cardiac recovery (several in a cell-specific fashion). Many identified targets do not have wide precedent in large-scale genomic discovery or human studies, highlighting the complementary roles for proteomic and tissue transcriptomic discovery to focus epidemiological targets to those relevant in human myocardium for further interrogation.

Keywords: heart failure; multiomics; proteomics; snRNA-seq; transcriptomics.

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Female
  • Heart Failure* / blood
  • Heart Failure* / genetics
  • Heart Failure* / metabolism
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Myocardium* / metabolism
  • Myocardium* / pathology
  • Proteome* / metabolism
  • Proteomics / methods
  • Transcriptome / genetics

Substances

  • Proteome