%0 Journal Article %T Identification and functional study of GATA4 gene regulatory variants in atrial septal defects. %A Fan D %A Pang S %A Chen J %A Shan J %A Cheng Q %A Yan B %J BMC Cardiovasc Disord %V 21 %N 1 %D 06 2021 30 %M 34193080 %F 2.174 %R 10.1186/s12872-021-02136-w %X Congenital heart disease (CHD) is the leading cause of mortality from birth defects. In adult CHD patients with successful surgical repair, cardiac complications including heart failure develop at late stage, likely due to genetic causes. To date, many mutations in cardiac developmental genes have been associated with CHD. Recently, regulatory variants in genes have been linked to many human diseases. Although mutations and splicing variants in GATA4 gene have been reported in CHD patients, few regulatory variants of GATA4 gene are identified in CHD patients.
GATA4 gene regulatory region was investigated in the patients with atrial septal defects (ASD) (n = 332) and ethnic-matched controls (n = 336).
Five heterozygous regulatory variants including four SNPs [g.31360 T>C (rs372004083), g.31436G>A, g.31437C>A (rs769262495), g.31487C>G (rs1053351749) and g.31856C>T (rs1385460518)] were only identified in ASD patients. Functional analysis indicated that the regulatory variants significantly affected the transcriptional activity of GATA4 gene promoter. Furthermore, two of the five regulatory variants have evidently effected on transcription factor binding sites.
Our data suggested that GATA4 gene regulatory variants may confer ASD susceptibility by decreasing GATA4 levels.