4.5 Review

Lateral thinking in syndromic congenital cardiovascular disease

Journal

DISEASE MODELS & MECHANISMS
Volume 16, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/dmm.049735

Keywords

KEY WORDS; Congenital heart disease; Heart development

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [1R01DK129350- 01A1]
  2. Swiss Bridge Foundation
  3. Anschutz Medical Campus, University of Colorado School of Medicine
  4. Children's Hospital Colorado Foundation, Blood Transfusion Center Zurich
  5. National Science Foundation [2203311]

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Syndromic birth defects are rare diseases that can present with multiple organ defects. The developmental plasticity of lateral plate mesoderm (LPM) may explain the seemingly unrelated defects in these diseases. Integrating patient genome-sequencing data with model organism studies provides insights into complex LPM-associated birth defects. Understanding the common LPM origin of congenital phenotypes allows us to discover developmental mechanisms and anticipate comorbidities in congenital diseases affecting the cardiovascular system and beyond.
Syndromic birth defects are rare diseases that can present with seemingly pleiotropic comorbidities. Prime examples are rare congenital heart and cardiovascular anomalies that can be accompanied by forelimb defects, kidney disorders and more. Whether such multi-organ defects share a developmental link remains a key question with relevance to the diagnosis, therapeutic intervention and long-term care of affected patients. The heart, endothelial and blood lineages develop together from the lateral plate mesoderm (LPM), which also harbors the progenitor cells for limb connective tissue, kidneys, mesothelia and smooth muscle. This developmental plasticity of the LPM, which founds on multi-lineage progenitor cells and shared transcription factor expression across different descendant lineages, has the potential to explain the seemingly disparate syndromic defects in rare congenital diseases. Combining patient genome-sequencing data with model organism studies has already provided a wealth of insights into complex LPM-associated birth defects, such as heart-hand syndromes. Here, we summarize developmental and known disease-causing mechanisms in early LPM patterning, address how defects in these processes drive multi-organ comorbidities, and outline how several cardiovascular and hematopoietic birth defects with complex comorbidities may be LPM-associated diseases. We also discuss strategies to integrate patient sequencing, data-aggregating resources and model organism studies to mechanistically decode congenital defects, including potentially LPM-associated orphan diseases. Eventually, linking complex congenital phenotypes to a common LPM origin provides a framework to discover developmental mechanisms and to anticipate comorbidities in congenital diseases affecting the cardiovascular system and beyond.

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