Publication | Open Access
Congenital Heart Disease: The Crossroads of Genetics, Epigenetics and Environment
105
Citations
77
References
2014
Year
Heart FailureCardiac Transcription FactorsGeneticsGenetic EpidemiologyCardiac Progenitor CellsCongenital Heart AnomalyEpigeneticsBirth MalformationsMolecular EpigeneticsCongenital Heart DefectClinical EpigeneticsCongenital Heart DiseasesCardiologyCongenital Heart DiseaseCardiomyopathyCardiac ReprogrammingCongenital Cardiac RepairDevelopmental BiologyAdult Congenital Heart DiseaseSystems BiologyMedicineCardiovascular Genetics
Congenital heart diseases (CHDs) are recognized as the most common type of birth malformations. Although recent advances in pre- and neonatal diagnosis as well as in surgical procedures have reduced the morbidity and mortality for many CHD, the etiology for CHD remains undefined. In non-syndromic and isolated (without a familial history or a Mendelian inheritance) forms of CHDs, a multifactorial pathogenesis with interplay between inherited and non-inherited causes is recognized. In this paper, we discuss the current knowledge of the potential molecular mechanisms, mediating abnormal cardiac development in non-syndromic and isolated CHD, including mutations in cardiac transcription factors, the role of somatic mutations and epigenetic alterations as well as the influence of gene-environment interactions. In the near future, the advent of high-throughput genomic technologies with the integration of system biology will expand our understanding of isolated, non-syndromic CHDs for their prevention, early diagnosis and therapy.
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