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Tissue remodelling and fibrosis which occur in response to injury play a central role in the development of many diseases. Chymase is a key enzyme believed to mediate these pathological processes. As such, chymase inhibitors have been under active development for the treatment of a number of conditions. To investigate the impact of reduced chymase function, we constructed a genetic score from two pLoF mutations in the gene encoding chymase and tested its association with diseases and biomarkers. Our study found no association between the genetically-predicted reduced chymase function score and heart failure, chronic kidney disease or other predefined conditions. We additionally found no association of the score with any physical measurements or biomarkers. Our results provide no evidence in support of chymase inhibition as a novel therapeutic strategy for the treatment or prevention of heart failure, chronic kidney disease or major cardiovascular events, as previously proposed.

Original publication

DOI

10.1007/s12265-022-10261-w

Type

Journal article

Journal

J Cardiovasc Transl Res

Publication Date

05/05/2022

Keywords

CMA1, CVD, China, Chronic kidney disease, Chymase, Fibrosis, Heart failure, pLoF variants