Distinct gene dysregulation patterns herald precision medicine potentiality in systemic lupus erythematosus
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Autoimmunity Systemic lupus erythematosus Systems biology Biomarkers Drug repurposing
Date
2023-03-28Referencia bibliográfica
J. Lindblom et al. Distinct gene dysregulation patterns herald precision medicine potentiality in systemic lupus erythematosus. Journal of Autoimmunity 136 (2023) 103025[https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jaut.2023.103025]
Patrocinador
The Swedish Rheumatism Association (R-941095); King Gustaf V’s 80-year Foundation (FAI-2020-0741); Swedish Society of Medicine (SLS-974449); Nyckelfonden (OLL-974804); Ulla and Roland Gustafsson Foundation (2021–26); Region Stockholm (FoUI-955483); Karolinska Institutet; Innovative Medicines Initiative (IMI) Joint Undertaking (JU) for the PRECISESADS project (grant number 115565); IMI 2 JU for the 3 TR project (grant number 831434); EU Horizon 2020Résumé
Objectives: We aimed at investigating the whole-blood transcriptome, expression quantitative trait loci (eQTLs),
and levels of selected serological markers in patients with SLE versus healthy controls (HC) to gain insight into
pathogenesis and identify drug targets.
Methods: We analyzed differentially expressed genes (DEGs) and dysregulated gene modules in a cohort of 350
SLE patients and 497 HC from the European PRECISESADS project (NTC02890121), split into a discovery (60%)
and a replication (40%) set. Replicated DEGs qualified for eQTL, pathway enrichment, regulatory network, and
druggability analysis. For validation purposes, a separate gene module analysis was performed in an independent
cohort (GSE88887).
Results: Analysis of 521 replicated DEGs identified multiple enriched interferon signaling pathways through
Reactome. Gene module analysis yielded 18 replicated gene modules in SLE patients, including 11 gene modules
that were validated in GSE88887. Three distinct gene module clusters were defined i.e., “interferon/plasma
cells”, “inflammation”, and “lymphocyte signaling”. Predominant downregulation of the lymphocyte signaling
cluster denoted renal activity. By contrast, upregulation of interferon-related genes indicated hematological
activity and vasculitis. Druggability analysis revealed several potential drugs interfering with dysregulated genes
within the “interferon” and “PLK1 signaling events” modules. STAT1 was identified as the chief regulator in the
most enriched signaling molecule network. Drugs annotated to 15 DEGs associated with cis-eQTLs included
bortezomib for its ability to modulate CTSL activity. Belimumab was annotated to TNFSF13B (BAFF) and daratumumab
was annotated to CD38 among the remaining replicated DEGs.
Conclusions: Modulation of interferon, STAT1, PLK1, B and plasma cell signatures showed promise as viable
approaches to treat SLE, pointing to their importance in SLE pathogenesis.