4.6 Article

Gene Expression Profiling of Blood in Brain Arteriovenous Malformation Patients

Journal

TRANSLATIONAL STROKE RESEARCH
Volume 2, Issue 4, Pages 575-587

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12975-011-0103-3

Keywords

Arteriovenous malformation; Blood; Gene expression; Intracranial hemorrhage; Microarray analysis

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [P01 NS044155, R01 NS034949, 3R01NS034949-14S1, K23 NS058357]
  2. NIH/NIGMS [T32 GM08440]
  3. NINDS
  4. ARRA [NS056302]
  5. American Heart Association Bugher Foundation Center for Stroke Prevention
  6. Aneurysm and AVM Foundation

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Brain arteriovenous malformations (BAVMs) are an important cause of intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) in young adults. Gene expression profiling of blood has led to the identification of stroke biomarkers and may help identify BAVM biomarkers and illuminate BAVM pathogenesis. It is unknown whether blood gene expression profiles differ between (1) BAVM patients and healthy controls or (2) unruptured and ruptured BAVM patients at presentation. We characterized blood transcriptional profiles in 60 subjects (20 unruptured BAVM, 20 ruptured BAVM, and 20 healthy controls) using Affymetrix whole genome expression arrays. Expression differences between groups were tested by ANOVA, adjusting for potential confounders. Genes with absolute fold change >= 1.2 (false discovery rate corrected p <= 0.1) were selected as differentially expressed and evaluated for over-representation in KEGG biological pathways (p <= 0.05). Twenty-nine genes were differentially expressed between unruptured BAVM patients and controls, including 13 which may be predictive of BAVM. Patients with ruptured BAVM compared to unruptured BAVM differed in expression of 1,490 genes, with over-representation of genes in 8 pathways including MAPK, VEGF, Wnt signaling, and several inflammatory pathways. These results suggest clues to the pathogenesis of BAVM and/or BAVM rupture and point to potential biomarkers or new treatment targets.

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