Leveraging the shared and opposing genetic mechanisms in the heritable cardiomyopathies.
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All Authors
Kramarenko, DR.
Haydarlou, P.
Powell, GJ.
Ramo, JT.
Janan, R.
Prince, C.
Zimmerman, DS.
Theotokis, P.
Thami, PK.
Haas, J.
LTHT Author
Greenwood, John
Page, Stephen
Page, Stephen
LTHT Department
Cardio-Respiratory
Cardiology
Cardiology
Non Medic
Publication Date
2026
Item Type
Journal Article
Preprint
Preprint
Language
Subject
HOSPITALISATION
Subject Headings
Abstract
Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) are heart muscle diseases with largely opposing structural and functional phenotypes. Yet, both may lead to the same devastating outcomes of advanced heart failure and life-threatening arrhythmias. Using genome-wide association data from 9,365 DCM cases, 5,900 HCM cases, and over 1.2 million controls, we show that DCM and HCM are largely inversely associated across multiple genomic levels. Modeling both disorders as opposing genetic entities, in case-case GWAS approaches, we identify 100 loci (17 novel) underlying the cardiomyopathy spectrum. Several loci map to potential therapeutic targets (e.g., ADM, CACNA2D2), and polygenic risk scores derived from these data show strong discrimination between DCM and HCM patients in external datasets (AUC 0.78-0.84; AUPRC ~ 0.85). The pervasive opposing associations suggest that cardiomyocyte-directed therapies may often have opposite effects in DCM versus HCM. Nevertheless, a shared-effect analysis reveals a single locus - near the calcium-buffering gene CASQ2 - and also identifies a concordant genomic component associated with cardiometabolic health and extracardiac risk factors. By leveraging the shared and opposing genetic mechanisms of DCM and HCM, our work defines the genomic architecture of major cardiomyopathy subtypes and suggests new directions for therapeutics and precision medicine in heart failure.
Journal
Research Square