[HTML][HTML] Increased prevalence of EPAS1 variant in cattle with high-altitude pulmonary hypertension

JH Newman, TN Holt, JD Cogan, B Womack… - Nature …, 2015 - nature.com
JH Newman, TN Holt, JD Cogan, B Womack, JA Phillips III, C Li, Z Kendall, KR Stenmark
Nature communications, 2015nature.com
High-altitude pulmonary hypertension (HAPH) has heritable features and is a major cause of
death in cattle in the Rocky Mountains, USA. Although multiple genes are likely involved in
the genesis of HAPH, to date no major gene variant has been identified. Using whole-exome
sequencing, we report the high association of an EPAS1 (HIF2α) double variant in the
oxygen degradation domain of EPAS1 in Angus cattle with HAPH, mean pulmonary artery
pressure> 50 mm Hg in two independent herds. Expression analysis shows upregulation of …
Abstract
High-altitude pulmonary hypertension (HAPH) has heritable features and is a major cause of death in cattle in the Rocky Mountains, USA. Although multiple genes are likely involved in the genesis of HAPH, to date no major gene variant has been identified. Using whole-exome sequencing, we report the high association of an EPAS1 (HIF2α) double variant in the oxygen degradation domain of EPAS1 in Angus cattle with HAPH, mean pulmonary artery pressure >50 mm Hg in two independent herds. Expression analysis shows upregulation of 26 of 27 HIF2α target genes in EPAS1 carriers with HAPH. Of interest, this variant appears to be prevalent in lowland cattle, in which 41% of a herd of 32 are carriers, but the variant may only have a phenotype when the animal is hypoxemic at altitude. The EPAS1 variant will be a tool to determine the cells and signalling pathways leading to HAPH.
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