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Cilia and Mitral Valve Prolapse

$34,074F31FY2019HLNIH

Medical University Of South Carolina, Charleston SC

Investigators

Linked publications & trials

Abstract

Project Summary Based on genetic and cellular discoveries made in the PI's lab and with her collaborators, this proposal focuses on novel mechanisms that are critical for formation of heart valves. Data presented in the proposal show that mutations in the DZIP1 gene cause a very common heart valve disease (i.e., mitral valve prolapse) and can be caused by errors in how valve tissue forms during development. These discoveries have led to the identification of cilia as a critical and unexplored area of valve development, and are the basis for this proposal. Our studies will provide unique opportunities to answer questions about heart-valve diseases that heretofore have been impossible to answer using even state-of-the-art biological and genetic approaches. Mitral Valve Prolapse is a serious clinical problem, affecting 1 in 40 individuals in the human population. Its secondary complications include arrhythmias, heart failure, and sudden death. There are no known non- surgical cures for this disease. The proposed work capitalizes on previously unrecognized genetic data collected from heart valve disease patients; studies in the mouse show that this class of genes is an important and previously unrecognized contributor to valve structural development and disease pathogenesis. The uncovering of this particular disease gene and the processes it regulates holds great potential for future remedial or therapeutic insight towards regeneration or formation of mechanically stable valve tissue that will be beneficial to valvular heart disease patients.

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