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The pathophysiological role of novel pulmonary arterial hypertension gene<i>SOX17</i>

Yukyee Wu, John Wharton, Rachel Walters, Eleni Vasilaki, Jurjan Aman, Lan Zhao, Martin R. Wilkins, Christopher J. Rhodes

2021European Respiratory Journal33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a progressive disease predominantly targeting pre-capillary blood vessels. Adverse structural remodelling and increased pulmonary vascular resistance result in cardiac hypertrophy and ultimately failure of the right ventricle. Recent whole-genome and whole-exome sequencing studies have identified SOX17 as a novel risk gene in PAH, with a dominant mode of inheritance and incomplete penetrance. Rare deleterious variants in the gene and more common variants in upstream enhancer sites have both been associated with the disease, and a deficiency of SOX17 expression may predispose to PAH. This review aims to consolidate the evidence linking genetic variants in SOX17 to PAH, and explores the numerous targets and effects of the transcription factor, focusing on the pulmonary vasculature and the pathobiology of PAH.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePenetrancePulmonary hypertensionExomeGeneDiseaseMuscle hypertrophyCopy-number variationExome sequencingCardiologyInternal medicineBioinformaticsCancer researchGeneticsGenomeBiologyMutationPhenotypePulmonary Hypertension Research and Treatments