Understanding genomic medicine for thoracic aortic disease through the lens of induced pluripotent stem cells

Front Cardiovasc Med. 2024 Feb 19:11:1349548. doi: 10.3389/fcvm.2024.1349548. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Thoracic aortic disease (TAD) is often silent until a life-threatening complication occurs. However, genetic information can inform both identification and treatment at an early stage. Indeed, a diagnosis is important for personalised surveillance and intervention plans, as well as cascade screening of family members. Currently, only 20% of heritable TAD patients have a causative mutation identified and, consequently, further advances in genetic coverage are required to define the remaining molecular landscape. The rapid expansion of next generation sequencing technologies is providing a huge resource of genetic data, but a critical issue remains in functionally validating these findings. Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) are patient-derived, reprogrammed cell lines which allow mechanistic insights, complex modelling of genetic disease and a platform to study aortic genetic variants. This review will address the need for iPSCs as a frontline diagnostic tool to evaluate variants identified by genomic discovery studies and explore their evolving role in biological insight through to drug discovery.

Keywords: 3D models; aortic aneurysm; aortic dissection; disease modelling; genetic variants; induced pluripotent stem cells; thoracic aortic disease.

Publication types

  • Review