Genome-wide whole blood transcriptome profiling in a large European cohort of systemic sclerosis patients
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Bmj Publishing Group
Materia
Gene expression RNA-Seq Pathogenesis Diseases
Date
2020-06-19Referencia bibliográfica
Beretta, L., Barturen, G., Vigone, B., Bellocchi, C., Hunzelmann, N., De Langhe, E., ... & Almeida, I. (2020). Genome-wide whole blood transcriptome profiling in a large European cohort of systemic sclerosis patients. Annals of the rheumatic diseases, 79(9), 1218-1226. [doi:10.1136/annrheumdis-2020-217116]
Sponsorship
EU/EFPIA/Innovative Medicines Initiative Joint Undertaking PRECISESADS 115 565Abstract
Objectives The analysis of annotated transcripts
from genome-wide
expression studies may help to
understand the pathogenesis of complex diseases, such
as systemic sclerosis (SSc). We performed a whole blood
(WB) transcriptome analysis on RNA collected in the
context of the European PRECISESADS project, aiming
at characterising the pathways that differentiate SSc
from controls and that are reproducible in geographically
diverse populations.
Methods Samples from 162 patients and 252 controls
were collected in RNA stabilisers. Cases and controls
were divided into a discovery (n=79+163; Southern
Europe) and validation cohort (n=83+89; Central-Western
Europe). RNA sequencing was performed by
an Illumina assay. Functional annotations of Reactome
pathways were performed with the Functional Analysis
of Individual Microarray Expression (FAIME) algorithm.
In parallel, immunophenotyping of 28 circulating cell
populations was performed. We tested the presence
of differentially expressed genes/pathways and the
correlation between absolute cell counts and RNA
transcripts/FAIME scores in regression models. Results
significant in both populations were considered as
replicated.
Results Overall, 15 224 genes and 1277 functional
pathways were available; of these, 99 and 225 were
significant in both sets. Among replicated pathways,
we found a deregulation in type-I
interferon, Toll-like
receptor cascade, tumour suppressor p53 protein
function, platelet degranulation and activation. RNA
transcripts or FAIME scores were jointly correlated with
cell subtypes with strong geographical differences;
neutrophils were the major determinant of gene
expression in SSc-WB
samples.
Conclusions We discovered a set of differentially
expressed genes/pathways validated in two independent
sets of patients with SSc, highlighting a number of
deregulated processes that have relevance for the
pathogenesis of autoimmunity and SSc.