Profiling of the plasma proteome across different stages of human heart failure.
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IF: 17.694
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Cited by: 43
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Datasets
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Abstract

Heart failure (HF) is a major public health problem characterized by inability of the heart to maintain sufficient output of blood. The systematic characterization of circulating proteins across different stages of HF may provide pathophysiological insights and identify therapeutic targets. Here we report application of aptamer-based proteomics to identify proteins associated with prospective HF incidence in a population-based cohort, implicating modulation of immunological, complement, coagulation, natriuretic and matrix remodeling pathways up to two decades prior to overt disease onset. We observe further divergence of these proteins from the general population in advanced HF, and regression after heart transplantation. By leveraging coronary sinus samples and transcriptomic tools, we describe likely cardiac and specific cellular origins for several of the proteins, including Nt-proBNP, thrombospondin-2, interleukin-18 receptor, gelsolin, and activated C5. Our findings provide a broad perspective on both cardiac and systemic factors associated with HF development.

Keywords

Omics
Spatial Transcriptomics
Gene Expression

MeSH terms

Adult
Aged
Aptamers, Peptide
Biomarkers
Coronary Sinus
Female
Gene Expression Profiling
Heart Failure
Heart Transplantation
Humans
Incidence
Male
Middle Aged
Prospective Studies
Proteome
Proteomics
Risk Factors

Authors

Egerstedt, Anna
Berntsson, John
Smith, Maya Landenhed
Gidlöf, Olof
Nilsson, Roland
Benson, Mark
Wells, Quinn S
Celik, Selvi
Lejonberg, Carl
Farrell, Laurie
Sinha, Sumita
Shen, Dongxiao
Lundgren, Jakob
Rådegran, Göran
Ngo, Debby
Engström, Gunnar
Yang, Qiong
Wang, Thomas J
Gerszten, Robert E
Smith, J Gustav

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