Project description:Even though autoimmune diseases are heterogeneous, believed to result from the interaction between genetic and environmental components, patients with these disorders exhibit reproducible patterns of gene expression in their peripheral blood mononuclear cells. A portion of this gene expression profile reflects family resemblance rather than the actual presence of an autoimmune disease. Here we wanted to identify that portion of this gene expression pattern that is independent of family resemblance and determine if it is a product of disease duration, disease onset, or other factors. By increasing the number of autoimmune samples in our analysis and employing supervised clustering algorithms, we identified 100 genes whose expression profiles are shared in individuals with various autoimmune diseases but are not shared by first-degree relatives of individuals with autoimmune disease or by controls. Individuals with early disease (1 yr after onset) and established disease (10 yr after onset) exhibit a near identical expression pattern suggesting that this unique profile reflects disease onset rather than disease duration. supervised gene expression profiling were performed to a cohort sample pool: control individuals(8), unaffected family members of autoimmune diseases patients (8), and individuals with autoimmune diseases (54). we try to identify a gene expression signatures that were exclusively associated with autoimmune diseases but not infulenced by genetic components
Project description:Even though autoimmune diseases are heterogeneous, believed to result from the interaction between genetic and environmental components, patients with these disorders exhibit reproducible patterns of gene expression in their peripheral blood mononuclear cells. A portion of this gene expression profile reflects family resemblance rather than the actual presence of an autoimmune disease. Here we wanted to identify that portion of this gene expression pattern that is independent of family resemblance and determine if it is a product of disease duration, disease onset, or other factors. By increasing the number of autoimmune samples in our analysis and employing supervised clustering algorithms, we identified 100 genes whose expression profiles are shared in individuals with various autoimmune diseases but are not shared by first-degree relatives of individuals with autoimmune disease or by controls. Individuals with early disease (1 yr after onset) and established disease (10 yr after onset) exhibit a near identical expression pattern suggesting that this unique profile reflects disease onset rather than disease duration. Keywords: gene expression signatures
Project description:This study constructed a proteomics atlas for old and young rheumatism patients and revealed SASPs present in individuals with three specific autoimmune diseases. Although we found several shared aging targets in healthy individuals and autoimmune patients, proteomics markers specific to different autoimmune disorders could still be identified.
Project description:Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have boosted our knowledge of genetic risk variants in autoimmune diseases (AIDs). Most of the risk variants are located within or near genes with immunological functions, and the majority is found to be non-coding, pointing towards a regulatory role. We have performed a cis expression quantitative trait locus (eQTL) screen to investigate whether single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with AIDs influence gene expression in thymus. Genotyping was performed using the Immunochip and 353 AID associated SNPs were tested against expression of surrounding genes (+/- 1 Mb) from human thymic tissue (N=42). We identified eight genes where the expression was associated with AID risk SNPs at a study-wide level of significance (P < 2.57x10-5). Five genes (FCRL3, RNASET2, C2orf74, SIRPG and SYS1) displayed cis eQTL signals also in other tissues, while for two loci (NPIPB8 and LOC388814), the eQTL signal appear to be thymus-specific. Since many AID risk variants from GWAS have been subsequently fine-mapped in recent Immunochip projects, we explored the overlap between these novel AID risk variants and the thymic eQTL regions. Moreover, we examined the functional annotation of the seven expression altering SNPs (eSNPs). Our study reveals autoimmune risk variants that act as eQTLs in thymus. We have highlighted functional variants within these genetic regions that potentially can represent causal autoimmune risk variants. Total RNA from 42 human thymic samples were obtained from children undergoing cardiac surgery.
Project description:Primary biliary cholangitis (PBC), primary sclerosing cholangitis (PSC), and inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs), including Crohn’s disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), are heterogeneous chronic autoimmune diseases that may share underlying pathogenic mechanisms. Herein, we compared simultaneously analyzed blood transcriptomes from patients with PBC, PSC, and IBD.