See
Genome Information for Homo sapiens
Background: Identifying individuals at heightened cardiovascular risk is a priority for reducing the global burden of cardiovascular disease. Aspirin is widely used to prevent cardiovascular events, though with variable results. Therefore, we hypothesized that aspirin exposure would reveal novel biological pathways relevant to the development of cardiovascular events. Methods: We administered aspirin, followed by peripheral blood RNA microarray profiling, in a discovery cohort of healthy volunteers (n = 50, HV1), followed by two validation cohorts of healthy volunteers (n = 53, HV2) or outpatient cardiology (OPC, n = 25) patients, in conjunction with platelet function testing with the platelet functions score (PFS, HV1 and HV2) or the VerifyNow Asprin (VN, OPC) test. Sets of coexpressed genes, or “Factors” were identified via Bayesian sparse factor analysis and associated with platelet function in HV1 and validated in HV2 and OPC. Validated factors were associated with death/MI in observational (n = 191) and case:control (n = 447) patient cohorts with available RNA data collected at the time of cardiac catheterization. Results: Factor analysis yielded 20 Factors, of which one, Factor 14, contained 60 genes and was associated with PFS in HV1 (r = -0.31, p-value = 0.03). Factor 14 was associated with platelet function with the same strength and direction in HV2 (r = -0.34, p-value = 0.02) and OPC (one-sided p-value for aspirin resistant vs. aspirin sensitive = 0.046), thus validating the association. Factor 14 was associated with death/MI in the two patient cohorts, odds ratio (OR) = 1.2, 95% CI [1.02-1.4], p-value = 0.01 and hazard ratio = 1.5, [1.2-1.9], p = 0.001, respectively, independent of known cardiovascular risk factors (combined OR = 1.2, CI = [1.02, 1.4], p = 0.03). Factor 14 and the expression of the Factor 14 transcript most highly correlative of PFS, ITGA2B, improved reclassification compared to traditional risk factors (category-free net reclassification index = 31% and 37%, p ≤ 0.0002 for both). Conclusions: By challenging humans subjects with aspirin, a medication used for cardiovascular risk reduction, we elucidated genes and pathways that may underlie platelet function and mechanisms responsible for cardiovascular death/MI.
This accession represents the OPC cohort microarray data
Overall design: 26 subjects selected for microarray analysis were divided into three groups: aspirin resistant (AR, n=8, >550 ARU), high normal (HN, n=9, ARU 500-549) and aspirin sensitive (AS, n=9, ARU<500)
| Accession | PRJNA168570; GEO: GSE38511 |
| Data Type | Transcriptome or Gene expression |
| Scope | Multiisolate |
| Organism | Homo sapiens[Taxonomy ID: 9606] Eukaryota; Metazoa; Chordata; Craniata; Vertebrata; Euteleostomi; Mammalia; Eutheria; Euarchontoglires; Primates; Haplorrhini; Catarrhini; Hominidae; Homo; Homo sapiens |
| Publications | - Voora D et al., "Aspirin exposure reveals novel genes associated with platelet function and cardiovascular events.", J Am Coll Cardiol, 2013 Oct 1;62(14):1267-1276
- Fallahi P et al., "Aspirin insensitive thrombophilia: transcript profiling of blood identifies platelet abnormalities and HLA restriction.", Gene, 2013 May 15;520(2):131-8
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| Submission | Registration date: 5-Jun-2012 Institute for Genome Sciences & Policy, Duke University |
| Relevance | Medical |
Project Data:
| Resource Name | Number of Links |
|---|
| Publications |
| PubMed | 2 |
| PMC | 2 |
| Other datasets |
| GEO DataSets | 1 |
GEO Data Details| Parameter | Value |
|---|
| Data volume, Spots | 1421550 |
| Data volume, Processed Mbytes | 31 |
| Data volume, Supplementary Mbytes | 122 |