Uncovering genetic architecture of the heart via genetic association studies of unsupervised deep learning derived endophenotypes.
Authors
Abstract
Recent genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have effectively linked genetic variants to quantitative traits derived from time-series cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, revealing insights into cardiac morphology and function. Deep learning approach generally requires extensive supervised training on manually annotated data. In this study, we developed a novel framework using a 3D U-architecture autoencoder (cineMAE) to learn deep image phenotypes from cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging for genetic discovery, focusing on long-axis two-chamber and four-chamber views. We trained a masked autoencoder to develop <b>U</b> nsupervised <b>D</b> erived <b>I</b> mage <b>P</b> henotypes for heart (Heart-UDIPs). These representations were found to be informative to indicate various heart-specific phenotypes (e.g., left ventricular hypertrophy) and diseases (e.g., hypertrophic cardiomyopathy). GWAS on Heart UDIP identified 323 lead SNP and 628 SNP-prioritized genes, which exceeded previous methods. The genes identified by method described herein, exhibited significant associations with cardiac function and showed substantial enrichment in pathways related to cardiac disorders. These results underscore the utility of our Heart-UDIP approach in enhancing the discovery potential for genetic associations, without the need for clinically defined phenotypes or manual annotations.